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Code · STATUTES-AT-LARGE · Vol. 24 STAT. · August 4, 1886 · Chapter 903

Chapter 903. making appropriations to supply deficiencies in the appropriations for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, and for prior years, and for other purposes

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A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.

CHAP. 903.— An Act making appropriations to supply deficiencies in the appropriations for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, and for prior years, and for other purposes.August 4, 1886. *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*,Deficiency appropriations. That the following sums be, and the same are hereby, appropriated, out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to supply deficiencies in the appropriations for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-six, and for other objects hereinafter stated, namely:
DEPARTMENT OF STATE.Department of State. French and American claims: For payment of the amount necessaryFrench and American Claims.Payment of balance.Vol. 21, p. 673. to strike a balance with France, after the payment, under the final award made by the late French and American Claims Commission against the United States, of the claims of French citizens against this Government, under the treaty of January fifteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty, between this country and France, fifteen thousand six hundred and thirty-nine dollars and sixteen cents.
For contingent expenses Department of State, to pay outstandingContingent expenses, outstanding accounts. accounts, as follows: Washing towels, twenty dollars; accounts of G. G. C. Simmes, thirty-six dollars and twenty-five cents, and George Ryneal, two dollars and sixty-live cents; expressage, thirty-two dollars and eighty cents; ice, one hundred and forty-seven dollars and forty-two cents; gas, four dollars and three cents; rent of telephones, eighty-nine dollars and seventy-eight cents; photography, forty-eight dollars and fifty cents;
Halifax Morning Herald, twenty four dollars; Unionist Gazette, Somerville, New Jersey, seventy-eight cents; Washington Post, three dollars; Baltimore Suu, six dollars and sixty cents; National Republican, ninety dollars; A. K. Williams, newspapers, eleven dollars and eighty cents; in all, five hundred and seventeen dollars and sixty-one cents; being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five and for prior years. foreign intercourse.Foreign intercourse.Ministers’ salaries.Brown, Shipley & Co.Balance due.Henry C.
Hall.Balance due. Salaries of ministers: To pay the balance found due upon the account of Messrs. Brown, Shipley and Co. United States bankers at London, for drafts of ministers’ salaries paid by them, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty five, twenty-two thousand four hundred and eight dollars and two cents; to pay the balance found due to Henry C. Hall, minister of the United States to the Central American states, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one thousand five hundred dollars; to enable the accounting officers to effect a proper settlement of the accountsChargés d’affaires ad interim. of certain officers of the United States acting as chargés d’affaires ad interim, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS, Sess.
I. Ch. 903. 1886. 257 -eighty-five, six thousand nine hundred and fifty dollars and ninety-sixThomas S. Osborn.Balance due. cents; to enable the accounting officers to pay the balance due upon the account of Thomas S. Osborn, minister resident and consul-general to Argentine Republic, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, three thousand nine hundred and three dollars and twelve cents; thirty four thousand seven hundred and sixty-two dollars and ten cents.
Salaries secretaries of legation: To pay the balance foundSalaries secretaries of legation.Brown, Shipley & Co.Balance due. due upon the account of Messrs. Brown, Shipley and Co., United States bankers at Loudon, for drafts for salaries of secretaries of legation paid by them, beingGeorge C. Foulk.Protest fees, etc. a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, two thousand eight hundred and forty-seven dollars and seven cents; to pay George C. Foulk, chargé d’affaires ad interim at Seoul, Corea, the amount of protest fees and expenses incurred by him on drafts returned to him on account of the exhaustion of the appropriation for salaries of ministers for fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, against which they were drawn, twenty-four dollars and one cent.
Salaries interpreters to legations: To enable the accounting Interpreters to legations.John A. Halderman.Reimbursement.officers to allow and credit John A. Haklermau, late minister and consul-general of the United States to Siam, the sum of one hundred and twenty-four dollars and sixty-eight cents, paid by him for salary of interpreter from July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, to December thirty-first, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, before he had received information of the reduction of the appropriations for salary of interpreter to the legation at Bangkok, Siam, from one thousand dollars to five hundred dollars, by the act of July seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-four.
Salaries of charges d’affaires ad interim: To supply a Salaries of chargé d’affaires ad interim.deficiency in the appropriation for salaries of charges d’affaires ad interim, eight thousand one hundred dollars. Contingent expenses foreign missions: To enable the proper Contingent expenses foreign missions.accounting officers, without the payment of any money from the Treasury, to settle the accounts of the United States ministers and others on account of the appropriation for “Contingent expenses of foreign missions” for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, by means of utilizing the entire appropriations under that bead generally; and, without regard to the division of the amount between specified and unspecified objects, authority is hereby granted for that purpose.
To enable the accounting officers, without the payment of any money from the Treasury, to allow Gustavus Goward.Credit to.and credit Gustavus Goward, secretary of legation of the United States in Japan, the sum of five hundred and fifty-two dollars and fifty-five cents, expended by him as bearer of dispatches from Washington to Tokio, Japan, in eighteen hundred and eighty-three, the same having been disallowed in his accounts. Salaries consular officers: To enable the accounting officersSalaries consular officers.E.
J. Smithers.Credit to. to allow and credit E. J. Smithers, consul.of the United States at Chin-Kiang, the sum of one thousand and eleven dollars and forty-eight cents, for his salary from July ninth to October twentieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, while acting as United States consul at Tieu-Tsin under the direction of the Department of Stale, the same having been disallowed in his accounts. To enable the accounting officers to pay to John G. Crawford, late consul at Coaticook;
Edwin Stevens, late Transit allowances.R. S., 1740, p. 310.consulat Ningpo; audFulton Paul, consul-general at Bucharest, the amounts allowed them respectively, under section seventeen hundred and forty of the Revised Statutes of the United States, for transit from their late posts toJohn G. Crawford.Edwin StevensFulton Paul. their residences in the United States, namely: John G. Crawford, from November thirteenth to fourteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four; Edwin Stevens, from July first to August thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five; and Fulton Paul, from July first to August ninth, eighteen hundred and 258 eighty-five, being deficiencies as follows:
For the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, ten dollars and eighty-seven cents; for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-six, seven hundred and ninety-two dollars and thirteen cents; in all, eight hundred and three dollars. To enable the accounting officers to pay to George P. Pomeroy, lateGeorge P. Pomeroy. agent and consul-general of the United States at Cairo, Egypt, the amount allowed under section seventeen hundred and forty of the Revised Statutes for his transit from his late post (at Cairo) to his residence in the United States, namely, from July sixth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, to August ninth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, four hundred and seventy-five dollars and fifty-four cents.
Contingent expenses United States consulates: To supply aContingent expenses. deficiency in the appropriation for contingent expenses of United States consulates, forty thousand dollars. To enable the accounting officers to effect a proper settlement of theSettlement of accounts of consular officers. accounts of certain consular officers, including the account of Benjamin S. Parker, late consul at Sherbrooke, for one hundred eighty six dollars and seventy-one cents, being deficiencies, as follows:
For the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, thirty-four thousand nine hundred seventy dollars and thirty-five cents; for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, two thousand one hundred seventy-four dollars and eighty-seven cents; in all, thirty-seven thousand one hundred forty-five dollars and twenty-two cents. To enable the accounting officers to effect a proper settlement of theContingent expenses of consular officers. accounts of certain consular officers, being a deficiency in the appropriation for contingent expenses United States consulates for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, four hundred and ninety-two dollars and four cents.
The accounting officers of the Treasury arc hereby authorized toA. G. Studer.Allowance to. allow in the settlement of the accounts of A. G. Studer, United Stales consul at Singapore, the sum of two hundred and fifty-seven dollars and fourteen cents, expended by him, under the direction of the Secretary of State, in payment of compensation of Alexander Gentle, deputy consul, from January twenty-first, eighteen hundred and eighty, to March nineteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty, during the illness of the consul, the same having been disallowed in his accounts.
To enable the accounting officers to effect a proper settlement of the accountF. A. Herberts.Reimbursement. of F. A. Herbert?, vice-consul of the United States at Cologne, by reimbursing the account of consular fees, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, five hundred dollars. To reimburse the following consular officers the protest fees and expensesProtest, fees,etc. incurred by them on drafts returned on account of the exhaust tion of the appropriation for contingent expenses United States consulates for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, against which Thomas T.
Gamble.J. C. A. Winate.E. P. Mnssey.they were drawn, namely: Thomas T. Gamble, United States vice-consul at Auckland, thirteen dollars and sixteen cents: J. C. A. Wingate, United States consul at Foo-Chow, two dollars and seven cents; E. P. Mussey, United States consul at Mabe, Seychelles, two dollars and eighty-seven cents; in all, eighteen dollars and ten cents. Salaries interpreters to consulates; To reimburse EdwinInterpreters to consulates.Edwin Stevens.Reimbursement. Stevens, late United States consul at Ningpo, China, amount expended by him for salary of interpreter to that consulate for the year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred eighty-five, four hundred and eighty dollars.
To reimburse Alexander C. Jones, late United States consul at Nagasaki,Alexander C. Jones, Japan, amount expended by him for salary of interpreter to that consulate for the year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred andReimbursement. eighty-five, five hundred dollars. To reimburse George II. Scidmore, United StatesGeorge C. Scidmore.Reimbursement. vice-consul at Osaka and Hiogo, Japan, amount expended by him while in charge of that consulate for salary of an interpreter, during the month of July, eight- 259 een hundred and eighty-four, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, forty-one dollars and sixty-eight cents.
To reimburse T. McF. Patton, United States consul at Osaka andT. McF. Patton.Reimbursement. Hiogo, Japan amount expended by him for salary of interpreter to that consulate for the third quarter of eighteen hundred and eighty-four, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one hundred and twenty-five dollars, To reimburse C. C. Andrews, late United States consul-general at RioC. C. Andrews.Clerk hire. de Janeiro, amount expended by him for clerk-hire in excess of the amount allowed by law during the year ending September first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, six hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary.
Boat and crew for consulate: To reimburse T. McF. Patton,T. MeF. Patton.To reimburse for boat and crew. United States consul at Osaka and Hiogo, Japan, the amount expended by him for pay of crew and care of consular boat, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, forty-five dollars and eighteen cents. Expenses of prisons for American convicts: To reimburse thePrisons for American convicts. following consular officers the difference between the amounts expended by them and the amounts allowed by the accounting officers under the provisions contained in the act of July seventh, eighteenReimbursements. hundred and eighty-four, relating to the expenses of prisons for American convicts, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty five, as follows:
To Julius Stahel, United States consul-general at Shanghai,Julius Stahel.T. McF. Patton. two hundred and eighty-two dollars and ninety-one cents; to T. McF. Patton, United states consul at Osaka and Hiogo, forty-six dollars and sixty-five cents; in all, three hundred and twenty-nine dollars and fifty-six cents. Rent of court-house and jail in japan: For payment ofRent of court-house and jail, Tokio, Japan. the annual rental of the court-house and jail at Tokio, Japan, for the year ending March fifteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, three thousand four hundred dollars.
Loss on bills of exchange, diplomatic service: To enableLoss on bills of exchange.Diplomatic service. the accounting officers to reimburse appropriations for the diplomatic service, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, the amount of loss on bills of exchange paid from said appropriations, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one hundred and thirty-five dollars and forty cents. Loss on bills of exchange, consular service: To reimburseConsular service.Alexander C.
Jones. Alexander C. Jones, late United States consul at Nagasaki. Japan, the amount paid by him for the loss by exchange on drafts which were returned to him unpaid, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-live, fifty-five dollars and fifty-two cents. To enable the accounting officers to reimburse appropriations for the consular service, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, the amount of loss on bills of exchange paid from said appropriations, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty five, one thousand three hundred and eighty-seven dollars and ninety cents.
Salaries consular officers not citizens: To meet a deficiencySalaries of consular officers not citizens. in the salaries of consular officers not citizens of the United States, for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, four thousand dollars. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION.Civil Service Commission. To pay amount found due by the accounting officers of the TreasuryContingent expenses. on account of contingent expenses, Civil Service Commission, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, seventy-three dollars and sixty-two cents. 260 TREASURY DEPARTMENT.Treasury Department. mints and assay-offices.Mints and assay offices.Director of the Mint.Salary.
To pay the Director of the Mint the difference between his salary as fixed by section three hundred and forty-four, Revised Statutes, and the amount appropriated for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty six, by the act of March third, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, five hundred dollars. For “Examination of Mints,” to reimburse the appropriation for expensesExamining mints, expenses. incurred by representatives of the Treasurer in examining mints, six hundred and fifty-seven dollars and eighty cents.
For “Books, pamphlets, and periodicals,” for the service of the fiscalBooks, pamphlets and periodicals.Boisé City.Wages, &c. year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, five dollars and twenty-five cents. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account of wages and contingent expenses assay-office at Boise City, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, thirty-eight dollars and thirty-one cents. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account ofHelena.Contingent expenses. contingent expenses assay-office at Helena, being deficiencies as follows:
For the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, eight dollars and fourteen cents; for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one hundred twenty dollars and forty-nine cents; in all, one hundred and,twenty-eight dollars and sixty-three cents. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account of wages ofWages. workmen, assay-office at Helena, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, four hundred and forty-seven dollars. independent treasury.Independent Treasury.N.
W. Spaulding.Salary as assistant treasurer, San Francisco. Authority is hereby granted the Secretary of the Treasury to pay from the existing appropriations to N. W. Spaulding, late United States assistant treasurer at San Francisco, his salary as assistant treasurer from May fourth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, the date his commission expired, to August twentieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, the date he was relieved by his successor, he having performed all the duties of said office for the period named without compensation. internal revenue.Internal Revenue.
For payment of amounts found due by the accounting officers of theSalaries, expenses, etc. Treasury Department on account of salaries and expenses of agents and subordinate officers of internal revenue, being a deficiency tor the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, two thousand three hundred dollars and sixty-six cents. That the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, authorizedWilliam R. Beatty. and directed to pay William R. Beatty, of Denver, Colorado, For services as ganger.the sum of five hundred and eighty five dollars and eighty-four cents, for services as internal-revenue ganger for Colorado from August first, eighteen hundred and seventy-two, to January thirty-first, eighteen hundred and seventy-three, which sum is hereby appropriated for that purpose out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated engraving and printing.Engraving and Printing.
To supply a deficiency in the appropriation for engraving, printing, Certificates of letters patent.and finishing certificates of letters patent, the sum of four hundred and thirty-five dollars, or in much thereof as may be necessary, of the un-expended balance of the general appropriation for labor and expenses of engraving and printing for the current year, is hereby authorized to be used tor the object herein specified. 261 coast and geodetic survey.Coast and Geodetic Survey.
For party expenses Coast and Geodetic Survey, being a deficiencyParty expenses. for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, five hundred and eighteen dollars and seventy cents. For furnishing points for State surveys, being a deficiency for thePoints for State surveys. fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, three hundred and fifty dollars and fifty cents. For general expenses Coast and Geodetic Survey, being a deficiencyGeneral expenses. for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one thousand four hundred and ninety-eight dollars and thirty-three cents.
For expense of lithographing illustrations for the Coast and GeodeticLithographing. Survey Annual Report, during the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-two, seventy-five dollars. miscellaneous objects. Pay of assistant custodians and janitors, including all personal servicesAssistant custodians and janitors, etc. in connection with all public buildings under control of the Treasury Department outside of the District of Columbia, fifty thousand dollars. Pay of assistant custodians and janitors, including all personal services in connection with al! public buildings under control of the Treasury Department outside of the District of Columbia, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, nineteen thousand seven hundred and forty-eight dollars and twenty-nine cents.
For expense of draping public buildings on the occasion of the deathDraping buildings. of Ex President Grunt, five thousand five hundred and forty-two dollars and sixty-eight cents. For expense of draping public buildings on the occasion of the death of Vice-President Hendricks, five thousand two hundred and seventeen dollars and ninety-six cents. For expenses of collecting the revenue, from customs for the fiscalCollecting customs revenues, June, 1885. year eighteen hundred and eighty-five and prior years, being the expenses for the mouth of June, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, as follows:
At the port of Boston, thirty-one thousand eight hundred andBoston.New York.Philadelphia.San Francisco. forty-seven dollars and five cents; New York, two hundred thousand dollars; Philadelphia, nineteen thousand two hundred and six dollars and ninety-six cents; San Francisco, twenty six thousand two hundred and fifty-nine dollars and eighty cents; in all, two hundred and seventy-seven thousand three hundred and thirteen dollars and eighty-one cents. To pay the amount found due Chester A.
Arthur, late collector ofChester A. Arthur.Amount due. customs for the district of New York, on account of expenses,of collecting the revenue from customs, fiscal year eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, nine hundred and seventy-two dollars and twenty-nine cents. For repayment to importers the excess of deposits for unascertainedRepayment to importers. duties, or duties or other moneys paid under protest, including interest and costs in judgment cases, two hundred thousand dollars.
For payment of amounts found due by the accounting officers of theExpenses Chinese restriction act.Vol. 22, p. 59. Treasury on account of services necessarily incurred in carrying out the provisions of the act to execute certain treaty stipulations relating to Chinese, approved May sixth, eighteen hundred and eighty-two: For the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-live, two hundred and twenty-five dollars and twentyMonr cents; for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-six, four hundred and eighty-four dollars; in all, seven hundred and nine dollars and twenty-four cents.
To refund to the Baltimore Storage and Lighterage Company theBaltimore Storage and Lighter-age Company.Refund of tonnage dues. amount collected from said company by the collector of customs at Baltimore, September fifteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, as alien tonnage dues on the British steamship Craigallion, and covered into the 262 Treasury, said due having since been remitted by the Secretary of the Treasury, six hundred and twenty-four dollars. To refund to George Hall and Company, of Ogdensburg, New York,George Hall & Co.Refund of tonnage dues. the amount collected from said firm by the collector of customs at Oswego, New York, as alien tonnage dues on the sloop William Wheeler, and covered into the Treasury, said dues having since been remitted by the Secretary of the Treasury, three hundred and thirty-nine dollars and ninety cents.
To pay W. G. Holden, inspector of customs at Corpus Christi, Texas,W. G. Holden.Informer’s fees. the one-half, due him as informer’s fees under section forty-two hundred and thirty-four of the Revised Statutes, of several penalties collected of vessels at that port, and covered into the Treasury, ninety-five dollars. To pay J. M. Currie the one-half, due himJ. M. Carrie.Informer’s fees. as informer’s fees under sections forty-four hundred and ninety-nine and forty-five hundred of the Revised Statutes, of a penalty collected of the owner of the steam-yacht Peanut, at the port of Jacksonville, Florida, and covered into the Treasury, twelve dollars and fifty cents.
For the maintenance of the United States fish-ponds in Washington Fish-ponds, Washington, D. C.and elsewhere, and the distribution of carp and other young fish, including salaries or compensation of all necessary employees, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, eight hundred and three dollars and eight cents. For rent of rooms for the United States Fish Commission, and otherFish Commission.Rent. necessary office expenses, during the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, eighteen dollars and sixteen cents.
To pay the accounts of A. P. Loud, assistant agent at the seal-fisheriesA. P. Loud.Travelling expenses. in Alaska, for travelling expenses, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, two hundred and eighty-two dollars and sixty-six cents. To pay George Wardman, late assistant agent at the seal fisheries in Alaska, salary from date George Ward-man.Salary and travelling expenses.of his removal to date of his arrival borne, and traveling expenses incurred by him in proceeding to his home, six hundred and ninety-six dollars and twenty-five cents.
To pay J. H. Moulton, late assistant agent at the seal fisheries inJ. H. Moulton.Salary and travelling expenses. Alaska, salary from date of his removal to date of his arrival home, eighty-eight dollars and twenty-four cents, and traveling expenses incurred by him in proceeding to his home, one hundred and seventy dollars and eighty-five cents; in all, two hundred and fifty-nine dollars and nine cents, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five. To pay William H.
Sears, late collector of customs at San Francisco,William H. Sears.Balance of judgment against, as collector of customs, San Francisco. California, balance due on a judgment obtained against him in the United States circuit court, district of California, by S. L. Jones and others, for damages on account of his action in taking possession of and preventing the entry for consumption of a cargo of tea imported into San Francisco in August, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, and which had been rejected by the tea-inspector under and in pursuance of Vol. 22, p. 451.the act of March second, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, two hundred and eighty-nine dollars and thirty-eight cents.
To refund to the Bee-Line Transportation Company of New York CityBee-Line transportation Co.Refuud of fees. fees and charges exacted for services rendered in documenting barges by the collector of customs at Perth Amboy, New Jersey, in contravention of the act of June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and Vol. 21, p. 44.seventy nine, during the years eighteen hundred and eighty, eighteen hundred and eighty-one, and eighteen hundred and eighty-two, two hundred and ninety-seven dollars and forty cents.
To refund to Antone Salazer the net proceeds covered into the TreasuryAntone Salazer.Refund of proceeds of cattle seized at El Paso.R. S., sec. 3082, p. 591. of certain cattle seized June twentieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, and sold by the collector of customs at El Paso, Texas, for violation of section three thousand and eighty-two, Revised Statutes, the forfeiture having since been remitted by the Secretary of the Treasury, one hundred and thirty-two dollars and ninety-four cents. 263 To refund to Thomas Thomas, master and owner of the steam oysterThomas Thomas.Refund of tine. boat J.
P. Thomas, so much of a fine incurred under section forty-three hundred and twenty-fire of the Revised Statutes as was remitted byR. S., sec., 4325, p. 836. the Secretary of the Treasury, but erroneously covered into the Treasury, forty dollars. To enable the Secretary of the Treasury to pay the judgment of theCæsar Gandolfo.Payment to. circuit court of the United States at New Orleans, Louisiana, rendered June tenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, in the case of Cæsar Gandolfo against George L.
Smith, collector of customs at New Orleans, Louisiana, five hundred and fifty-one dollars and sixty-three cents. To pay amount found due by the accounting officers to H. B. Geissiiiger,H. B. Geissinger.Payment to. deputy naval officer, at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, two thousand and twenty-four dollars and thirty cents, being the difference between his salary as fixed by section twenty-seven hundred and five, RevisedR. S., sec. 2705, p. 530. Statutes, and the amount received by him, authority is hereby granted to the Secretary of the Treasury to pay the same from the balance of the appropriation of one hundred and eighty-two thousand four hundred and thirty-two dollars and eighty-two cents made by the act of July seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-four (twenty-third Statutes, page two hundred and fifty-seven), remaining on the books of the Treasury.Vol. 23, p. 257.
To adjust the accounts of Henry W. Hoffman, late collector of customsHenry W. Hoffman.Credit in accounts of. at Baltimore, Maryland, authority is hereby granted the proper accounting officers to allow a credit of three thousand eight hundred and seventy-five dollars and ninety-eight cents in his accounts, for customs moneys over-deposited in the Treasury by him. and to apply the same to balances due from him to the United States. For expense of paving on Locust and Olive streets around the UnitedCustom-house, Saint Louis, Mo.Paving streets around.
States customhouse, Saint Louis, Missouri, fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-tour, six thousand one hundred and sixty-nine dollars and thirty nine cents. That the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized and directedAlamo Cement Company.Payment to. to pay to the Alamo Cement Company of San Antonio, Texas, for work done and material furnished by said company in constructing a permanent pavement around the United States arsenal in the city of San Antonio, Texas, eight thousand two hundred and thirty-three dollars and thirteen cents.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.District of Columbia. To pay Columbus Thomas balance due on contract numbered six hundred and sixty-five,Columbus Thomas.For constructing police station. for constructing the seventh precinct police station, one thousand three hundred and sixty dollars and ninety cents; and to pay other outstanding bills on account of purchase of site and erection of the new seventh precinct station, thirty-six dollars and twenty-eight cents; in all, one thousand three hundred and ninety-seven dollars and eighteen cents.
To pay Isaac D. Sinead and Company for heating apparatus in theIsaac D. Smead & Co.Assessor’s office.Contingencies. Addison school building, two hundred and fifty dollars. For contingent expenses assessor’s office, being a deficiency for eighteen hundred and eighty-five, thirty-nine dollars and thirty-two cents. For engineer’s office, expenses of office of inspector of gas and meters, being a Inspector of gas and meters.Contingent expenses, Dial let of Columbia.deficiency for eighteen hundred and eighty five, one dollar and fifteen cents.
For District offices and markets, for fuel, ice, gas, repairs, insurance, and general necessary expenses, being a deficiency for eighteen hundred and eighty-five, three hundred and sixty-two dollars and thirty-five cents. For contingent expenses executive office, being a deficiency for eighteen hundred and eighty-four, forty dollars. For contingent expenses engineer’s office, being a deficiency for eighteen hundred and eighty-four, four dollars and ten cents. 264 For repairs to concrete pavements, being a deficiency of eighteenRepairs to pavements. hundred and eighty-five, twenty-three dollars and ten cents.
For materials for permit work, being a deficiency for eighteen hundredMaterials. and eighty-five, one hundred and seventy-seven dollars and seventy-four cents. For Boundary street sewer, being a deficiency for eighteen hundredBoundary street sewer. and eighty-four, forty-four dollars and thirty-six cents. For current work of repairs of streets, avenues, and alleys, being aRepairs, streets, alleys, etc. deficiency for eighteen hundred and eighty-five, twenty-two dollars and ninety-eight cents.
For cleaning and repairing lateral sewers and basins, being a deficiency for eighteen hundred and eighty-five, fifty-three dollars and seventy-eight cents. For cleaning tidal sewers, being a deficiency for eighteen hundredCleaning tidal sewers. and eighty-five, nineteen dollars and sixty-nine cents. For completion of the boundary sewer, twenty thousand dollars.Boundary sewer. To assume the expenses incurred for night schools in the fiscal yearNight schools. eighteen hundred and eighty-six, six hundred dollars.
For purchase of sites and erection and completion of new schoolSchool buildings. buildings, eight hundred and eighty dollars and thirteen cents. For rent of school buildings, being a deficiency for eighteen hundredRent of school buildings. and eighty-five, three hundred dollars. For contingent expenses of the public schools, being a deficiencyContingent expenses, schools. for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, two thousand one hundred and eighteen dollars and thirty-three cents.
For contingent expenses of the public schools, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-three, four dollars and fifty cents. For judicial expenses: To pay William Forsyth fee for survey andWilliam Forsyth, survey. plat showing the distance from Mr. Gregory’s house to the white and colored public schools situate in the subdivision of the Howard University grounds, for use in the suit of Gregory versus School Trustees, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-three, fifteen dollars.
For judicial expenses: For counsel fees in defending the District ofCounsel fees. Columbia against the claims of Samuel Strong in the courts, one thousand dollars. For miscellaneous expenses, being for bills on account of general advertisingAdvertising bills. during the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one thousand and nine dollars and thirty cents. For the payment of judgments against the District of Columbia, including interest Judgments against the District.*Proviso*.and costs, sixteen thousand seven hundred and sixty-two dollars and seventy-three cents: *Provided*, That no judgment shall be paid until the right of appeal shall have expired.
To enable the Secretary of the Interior to provide for the educationEducation of feeble-minded children. of feeble-minded children belonging to the District of Columbia, two-thousand five hundred dollars. To enable the Secretary of the Interior to provide for the education of feeble-minded children belonging to the District of Columbia, being for the service of the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, seven hundred and eight dollars and forty-nine cents.
For the rent of school buildings in the District of Columbia for theRent of school buildings. fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-seven, one thousand five hundred dollars. That the sum appropriated for the erection of school buildings duringIncrease of amount for school buildings for current year.*Ante*, p. 136. the current fiscal year, as appropriated for by the District appropriation act, be increased to seventy-five thousand dollars and the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, additional is hereby appropriated for said purpose.
That one-half of the foregoing amounts to meet deficiencies in the appropriationsDeficiencies to be borne by District and General Government in in equal parts. on account of the District of Columbia shall be paid from the revenues of the District of Columbia and one-half from an,y money in the Treasury of the United States not otherwise appropriated 265 Increase of water supply, Washington, District of Columbia:Increase of water supply.Vol. 22, p. 168. To enable the Secretary of War to complete the work of increasing the water supply of the city of Washington under the act entitled “An act to increase the water supply of the city of Washington, and for other purposes,” approved July fifteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-two, namely:
To complete the reservoir, one hundred and sixty thousand dollars; to complete the tunnel, three hundred and ninety-five thousand dollars; in all, five hundredTo complete reservoir and tunnel. and fifty-five thousand dollars, or so much thereof as maybe necessary; but the Secretary of War is instructed forthwith, to submit to the Board of Engineers for Fortifications and for River and Harbor Improvements whether any changes are demanded for reasons ofBoard of Engineers to report whether changes are required. safety or economy in the method of lining said tunnel heretofore adopted and pursued, and whether any changes are required in the method of lining and perfecting the reservoir: *Provided*,*Proviso*.Work to proceed pending report.Apportionment between United States and District.Vol. 22, p. 170.Vol. 23, p. 132.
That said board shall make full report thereon and pending such examination the work shall proceed upon such parts thereof as the Secretary of War shall direct. The work above provided for to be. done under the contract heretofore made or by a reletting, as in the discretion of the Secretary of War shall be most promotive of the interest of the Government, and the two sums hereinabove appropriated to be subject to all the provisions and restrictions of the said act of July fifteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-two, and of the act approved July fifth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, making appropriations for the expenses of the Government of the District of Columbia, as to its apportionment and settlement between the United States and the District of Columbia and the refunding thereof.
WAR DEPARTMENT.War Department. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers of the TreasuryContingent expenses. for services rendered on account of contingent expenses War Department, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, thirteen dollars and seventy-eight cents. To pay to Lilia M. Pavy, the widow of Doctor Octave Pavy, the balanceLilia M. Pavy.Amount due Dr. Octave Pavy. of pay found due him by the accounting officers of the Treasury, on account of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four and prior years, two thousand eight hundred and twenty-nine dollars and eleven cents.
To enable the Secretary of War to pay, out of the unexpended balanceBlanche W. Woodward.Amount due the late Surgeon J. J. Woodward for services to President Garfield.Vol. 22, p. 284. of the appropriation of fifty-seven thousand five hundred dollars made by the act approved August fifth, eighteen hundred and eighty two, for payment of awards growing out of the illness and burial of the late President Garfield, to Mrs Blanche W. Woodward, widow of the late Surgeon Joseph J. Woodward, United States Army, for especial and meritorions services rendered by her husband in the last illness of President Garfield, two thousand five hundred dollars.
Army and Navy Hospital, Hot Springs, Arkansas: For completionArmy and Navy Hospital, Hot Springs, Ark. of hospital, to put it in proper condition to receive patients, as enumerated in House Executive Document Number Sixty-two, page fifteen, first session Forty-ninth Congress, eight thousand nine hundred and fifty-two dollars. public buildings and grounds under chief engineer.Public buildings and grounds. To pay outstanding liability contracted by Colonel A. F. Rockwell,Executive Mansion. while in charge of public buildings and grounds, under the Chief of engineers, for putting down and taking up crash, and so forth, at receptions at the Executive Mansion, between January thirteenth and February twenty-first, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one hundred and thirty five dollars and fifty cents. 266 quartermaster’s department.Quarter master’s Department.Transportât ion of clothing and •camp equipage,-etc.
For transportation of the Army, including baggage of the troops, when moving either by land or water; of clothing and camp and garrison equipage from the depots of Philadelphia and Jeffersonville to the several posts and Army depots, and from those depots to the troops in the held; of horse equipments and of subsistence stores from the places of purchase and from the places of delivery, under contract, to such places as the circumstance of the service may require them to be sent; of ordnance, ordnance stores, and small arms from the founderies and armories to arsenals, fortifications, frontier posts, and Army depots; freights, wharfage, tolls, and ferriages; the purchase and hire of boises, mules, oxen, and harness, and the purchase and repair of wagons, carts, and drays, and of ships and other sea going vessels and boats required for the transportation of supplies and for garrison purposes; for dray-age and cartage at the several posts; hire of teamsters; pay of enlisted men on extra duty driving teams or repairing means of transportation; transportation of funds for the Pay and other disbursing Departments; the expenses of sailing public transports on the varions rivers, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Atlantic and Pacific; for procuring water at such posts as from their situation require it to be brought from a distance: and for clearing roads, and for removing obstructions from roads, harbors, and rivers to the extent which may be required for the actual operations of the troops in the field, being for service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, ninety five thousand dollars.
For cloth, woolens, materials, and for the manufacture of clothingCloth, materials, manufacture, etc. for the Army; for issue and for sales at cost price, according to the Army regulations; for altering and fitting clothing when necessary; for equipage and for packing, and similar necessaries, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, sixty-tight thousand dollars. signal service.Signal Service. For fuel, authorized allowance for enlisted men at Fort Myer, Virginia,Allowance for fuel. and for varions offices at Fort Myer, Virginia, and on United States military telegraph lines, and for sale of the regulation allowance to officers of the Signal Corps and officers doing duty therewith, two thousand nine hundred and forty-six dollars.
For commutation of fuel, two hundred dollars.Commutation of fuel.Extra-duty pay to enlisted men. For extra duty pay for thirteen enlisted men of the Signal Corps employed at the post of Fort Myer, Virginia, on constant duty for periods of not less than ten days, as follows: One schoolteacher, one painter, one engineer, and one plumber, at fifty cents per day each; three teamsters and six laborers, at thirty-five cents per day each, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-nine dollars and seventy-five cents.
To pay the American Graphic-Company of New York City for makingAmerican Graphic Company, weather maps. plates and publishing weather maps, during the fiscal years eighteen hundred and eighty-live and eighteen hundred and eighty-six, five thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars, the same to be received in full compensation for such work np to the present time; and hereafter Specific appropriations to be necessary hereafter.none of such work shall be done except under specific appropriations therefor made in advance.
NAVY DEPARTMENT.Navy Department. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers of the TreasuryContingent expenses. on account of contingent expenses of the Navy Department, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, twenty dollars and sixty-five cents. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers of the Treasury on account of contingent expenses of the Navy Department, being for 267 the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and ninety-eight dollars and ninety-six cents.
To pay amount found due by the accounting officers of the Treasury on account of the library, Navy Department, being for the service of theLibrary. fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four and prior years, five hundred and thirty-eight dollars and thirty-nine cents. To pay amount found due by the accounting officers of the Treasury on account of miscellaneous expenses Hydrographic Office, being for theHydrographic Office, miscellaneous expenses. service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty four, eighty-nine dollars and forty-nine cents.
To pay amount found due by the accounting officers of the TreasuryNaval Observatory, miscellaneous and contingent expenses. on account of contingent and miscellaneous expenses Naval Observatory, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, two dollars and thirty-nine cents. NAVAL ESTABLISHMENT.Naval establishment. To pay amount found due by the accounting officers on account ofTheo Gotlig.Pay. additional pay for previous service of Theo Gotlig, an enlisted may, being of the service of the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and eighty-nine dollars.
To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account ofTravelling expenses, officers. traveling expenses of officers of the Navy traveling under orders, being for the service of the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and fifteen dollars and twenty-six cents. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account ofFreight. freight, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, seven hundred and one dollars and sixty-eight cents.
To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account of freight, being tor the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and ninety dollars and two cents. To pay amount found due by the accounting officers on account of freight, being for the service, of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and two dollars and eighty-three cents. For payment of bills on account of contingent expenses, being a deficiencyContingent expenses. for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, four hundred and seventy dollars and eighteen cents.
To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account of freight, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred andFreight. eighty-five, six dollars and sixty one cents. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account of freight, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, two thousand six hundred and five dollars and fifty-four cents. For payment of bills as follows, being a deficiency fur the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five:
June tenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, Old Colony 8. B. Co., transportation of enlisted men from New YorkTransportation of officers and men. to Newport, one hundred and twenty-seven dollars; May twenty-seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty five. Old Colony 8. B. Co., transportation of enlisted men from New York to Newport, one hundred and sixty-two dollars; June first, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, Pacific Mail S. S. Co., transportation of enlisted men from New York to San Francisco, four hundred and ninety-three dollars and fifty cents;
June twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, Pacific Mail 8. 8. Co., transportation of enlisted men from San Francisco to New York, four thousand nine hundred and thirty-five, dollars; April seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, Pacific Mail S. 8. Co., transportation of enlisted men from New York to Aspinwall (Panama expedition), one thousand six hundred dollars; May twentieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, Pacific Mail 8. S. Co., transportation of enlisted men from Aspinwall to New York (Panama expedition), one thousand one hun- 268 dred and seventy dollars; in all, eight thousand four hundred and eighty seven dollars and fifty cents.
To supply a deficiency in the contingent service of the Bureau ofBureau of Ordnance, contingent expenses. Ordnance for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-live, one thousand three hundred dollars. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account of freight,Freight. being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, six hundred and twelve dollars and forty-four cents. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account of freight, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one thousand three hundred and seventy-seven dollars and seven ty-five cents.
To reimburse the appropriation “Provisions, Navy,” for provisions issuedProvisions. during the first quarter, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, by Reimburse appropriation, supplies furnished destitute Americans and foreigners.Paymaster Theo S. Thompson, United States steamer Swatara, to American citizens and foreigners in distress taken on board for transportation to New Orleans, two hundred and fifty-four dollars and seventy-nine cents. To reimburse the appropriation “Clothing, Navy,” for clothing issuedClothing.Reimburse appropriation, supplies furnished destitute Americans and foreigners.Small stores.Reimburse appropriation, supplies furnished destitute Americans and foreigners.W.
H. Dice.Boxing, etc., Nautical Almanac Office.Naval Academy. during the first quarter, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, by Paymaster Theo S. Thompson, United States steamship Swatara, to American citizens and foreigners in distress taken on board for transportation to New Orleans, one thousand and sixty eight dollars and ninety-live cents. To reimburse the appropriation “Small stores, Navy,” for small stores issued during the first quarter, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, by Paymaster Theo S.
Thompson, United States steamer Swatara, to American citizens and foreigners in distress taken on board for transportation to New Orleans, thirty dollars and twenty-six cents. For payment to W. II. Dice for boxing and packing instruments for the Nautical Almanac Office, fourteen dollars and fifty-six cents. naval academy. For deficiency in appropriation for expenses of the Board of VisitorsBoard of Visitors, expenses. to the United States Naval Academy in June, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, three hundred and sixty-three dollars and sixty-one cents: *Proviso*.Payment for intoxicating liquors forbidden.*Provided*, That no part of this sum, or of any other appropriation by Congress for expenses of the Board of Visitors, shall be used to pay for intoxicating liquors. marine corps.Marine Corps.
To pay accounts rendered by Samuel I. Gervish and Frank Hume forSamuel J. Gerrish.Frank Hume.Rations. rations furnished to marines at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and Mare Island, California, fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, being amount of monthly reservations withheld from bills paid them during the year, two thousand and ninety-four dollars and ninety-two cents. To pay amount due the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Navy Department,Bureau Medicine and Surgery.Rations.
United States Navy, for rations stopped at the several marine stations on account of naval hospitals during the year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, three thousand six hundred dollars and sixty cents. To reimburse the appropriation “Provisions, Navy, eighteen hundredProvisions. and eighty-five,” the amount found Amount due for supplies to Marine Corps, Panama expedition.due by the accounting officers for provisions supplied to a detachment of the United States Marine Corps en route, to Panama on duty, being for the service of the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, six thousand three hundred and ninety-three dollars and forty-two cents.
To pay amount found due by the accounting officers on account ofC. A. Doyle. difference of pay to lieutenant C. A. Doyle, United States Marine Difference of pay.Corps, being for the service of the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, two dollars and forty cents. 269 To pay accounts rendered the Quartermaster’s Department for hireHire of quarters. of quarters, twenty-six dollars and forty cents. To pay accounts rendered for repair of barracks, Boston, Massachusetts, Repair of barracks.five hundred and twenty-five dollars.
To pay accounts on file for “Hire of quarters” for officers servingHire of quarters. with troops where there are no public quarters belonging to the Government, and where there are not sufficient quarters possessed by the United States to accommodate them, from July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, to December thirty-first, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, all being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five. two thousand three hundred and eighty dollars and eighty cents.
To pay accounts rendered the quartermaster’s department, MarineTransportation, Panama expedition. Corps, for transportation furnished in connection with United States expedition to the Isthmus of Panama, and also to pay for advertising for recruits, being a deficiency for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one thousand three hundred and ninety-six dollars and sixty-two cents. To pay accounts rendered the quartermaster’s department, MarineGas, water, etc.
Corps, for gas, water, and so forth, and to pay express charges due United States Army, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, nine hundred and sixty-four dollars and forty-four cents. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account ofFreight. freight and transportation, being for the service of the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, three hundred and thirty-four dollars and seven cents. To reimburse the appropriation “Small stores” the amount found dueSmall stores, Panama expedition. by the accounting officers for small stores supplied to a detachment of the United States Marine Corps en route to Panama, on duty, being for the service of the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, forty-nine dollars and sixty-three cents.
To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account ofFreight. freight and transportation, being for the service of the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, four hundred and ninety-seven dollars and sixty cents. transportation marine corps. For payment to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company for transportationTransportation of Marine Corps to Isthmus of Panama,Pacific Mail Steamship Company. from New York to Aspinwall and return to New York of the naval force under command of Commander B, W.
McCalla, United States Navy, sent to the Isthmus of Panama to enforce the rights of the United States secured by the treaty of eighteen hundred and forty-six with New Granada, United States of Colombia, as follows: From New York to Aspinwall: Twelve officers, Marine Corps, per City of Para, April third, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, at twenty dollars each, two hundred and forty dollars; two hundred and two men, Marine Corps, per City of Para, April third, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, at ten dollars each, two thousand and twenty dollars; fourteen officers, Marine Corps, per Acapulco, April seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, at twenty dollars each, two hundred and eighty dollars; two hundred and fifty-nine men, Marine Corps, per Acapulco, April seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, at ten dollars each, two thousand five hundred and ninety dollars.
From Aspinwall to New York: Fifteen officers, Marine Corps, per Colon, arrived May sixteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-live, at twenty dollars each, three hundred dollars; two hundred and forty-nine men, Marine Corps, per Colon, arrived May sixteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, at ten dollars each, two thousand tour hundred and ninety dollars; thirteen officers, Marine Corps, per Acapulco, arrived June third, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, at twenty dollars each, 270 two hundred and sixty dollars; one handled and forty-five men, Marine Corps, per Acapulco, arrived June third,eighteen hundred and eighty-five, at ten dollars each, one thousand four hundred and fifty dollars; in all, nine thousand six hundred and thirty dollars. miscellaneous objects.Miscellaneous, Navy.
To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account ofOfficers’ lost clothing. clothing lost by officers on vessels sunk or otherwise destroyed in service, being for the service, of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, two hundred and fifty-eight dollars and thirty three cents. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account ofClothing and bedding destroyed for sanitary purposes. clothing and bedding destroyed by order for sanitary purposes, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-six, eighty-one dollars and seventy-seven cents.
To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers on account of clothing and bedding destroyed by order for sanitary purposes, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, two bundled and thirty-three dollars and sixty-nine, cents. To pay to Benjamin Atwood, late an acting master’s mate in theBenjamin A t-wood, clothing lost. United States Navy, the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, for reimbursement for clothing lost by him in consequence of the destruction of the Iron Age.
For completing coaling-shed and naval storehouse at Port Royal Harbor,Port Royal Harbor, S. C., coal-shed, etc. South Carolina, four thousand dollars. INTERIOR DEPARTMENT.Interior Department. For payment of amount found due by the accounting officers of theInvestigating pension cases. Treasury for services rendered in the investigation of pension cases, office of Commissioner of Pensions, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and eighty-five dollars and seventy-three cents.
To pay George G. Tarbell in full compensation for costs and chargesGeorge G. Tarbell.Payment to. incurred by him in successfully defending suit brought against him for faithfully certifying as pension examining surgeon to the nature of the disease of an applicant tor pension, two hundred and twenty-five dollars and sixty-nine cents. To provide for the deficiency in appropriation for the payment ofExamining surgeons, fees and expenses. fees and expenses of examining surgeons of the United States Pension Office, three hundred and twenty-one thousand six hundred and sixty dollars and sixty-nine cents.
To reimburse the appropriation for the payment of fees and expenses of examining surgeons of the United States Pension Office for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, one hundred and seventy eight thousand three hundred and thirty-nine dollars and thirty-one cents. To provide for a deficiency in the appropriations for the payment ofSpecial examiners, per diem. per diem to special examiners in the Pension Office, for the fiscal years eighteen hundred and eighty-two, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, and eighteen hundred and eighty-four, three thousand dollars.
To provide for a deficiency in the appropriation for the payment ofContingent expenses. contingent expenses Department of the Interior, for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, being for payment of expenses incurred in fitting up quarters for supervising special examiner, one hundred and twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents. For photolithographing or otherwise producing plates for the PatentPhotolithographing, etc., Official Gazette.Middleton, Lane & Co., Capitol terrace.
Office Official Gazette, five hundred dollars. For the payment of the amount due Messrs. Middleton, Lane and Company for material and labor furnished for north approach of United States Capitol terrace, as per statement, Executive Document Number 271 One Hundred and Four, Forty-ninth Congress, first session, two thousand eight hundred and thirty-three dollars and forty-eight cents. public-lands service.Public lands. To pay amounts found due by the accounting officers to William McMicken,William McMicken.Payment to. survey or-general of Washington Territory, on account of salaries of his office, being deficiencies as follows:
For the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty five, four hundred and ninety-five dollars; for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one thousand and fifty dollars; in all, one thousand five hundred and forty-five dollars. To pay amounts found due by the. accounting officers on account of depredations on public timber, being a deficiency for the fiscal yearTimber depredations. eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one hundred and thirty-nine dollars and eighty cents.
To pay amount found due by the accounting officers to R. A. Johnson,R. A. Johnson.Payment to. surveyor-general of Arizona, on account of contingent expenses of his office, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, twenty-four dollars and seventy cents. miscellaneous objects.Miscellaneous. To pay the account of H. L. Pelouze and Son for printing materialH. L. Pelouze, printing material. furnished the Census Bureau in the years eighteen hundred and eighty-three and eighteen hundred and eighty-four, ten dollars and six cents.
The accounting officers of the Treasury are authorized and directedRichard Joseph.Credits in accounts of, for: to credit the accounts of Richard Joseph, late disbursing clerk. Department of the Interior, with the following disbursements, made in good faith and on properly approved vouchers, heretofore disallowed in the settlement of said disbursing clerk’s accounts by the late accounting officers of the Treasury, namely: Extension of the Government Printing Office: June thirtieth,Extension Government Printing Office. eighteen hundred and eighty-two, to Michael Brady, for rent of small building in rear of Government Printing Office, used as a workshop while engaged in the extension of the Printing Office, twenty-five dollars.
Annual repairs United States Capitol: June thirtieth, eighteenAnnual repairs, Capitol. hundred and eighty-two, to Washington and Georgetown Railroad Company, for rent of frame building used by the engineer’s office, Capitol grounds during the second quarter eighteen hundred and eighty-two, one hundred and twenty dollars. Salaries office Secretary of the Interior: June thirtieth,Salaries. eighteen hundred and eighty, to George W. Evans, extra services, two hundred dollars. Expenses of the Tenth Census, eleven thousand three hundredTenth Census. and twenty-nine dollars and fifty-two cents. indian affairs.Indian Affairs.
To pay amount found due the Union Pacific Railway Company forUnion Pacific Railway-Company.Transportation. transportation furnished sundry persons traveling under orders in connection with the purchase and inspection of Indian supplies, in July and September, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, as per certificates of Second Comptroller numbered thirty-five hundred and seventy seven, January thirteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, and numbered forty-four hundred and seven, April twenty fourth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, three hundred and thirty-nine dollars and eighty-two cents.
To pay amount found due the Western Union Telegraph CompanyWestern Union Telegraph Company.Telegrams. for transmitting messages for the Indian service to and from the New York warehouse, April to June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, as per certificate of Second Comptroller numbered thirty-six hun 272 tired and ninety, January twenty-seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, two hundred and ten dollars and twenty-two cents.
To pay amount found due Peter C. Barnum for services rendered asPeter C. Baruum.Inspection, clothing. inspector of clothing at the New York warehouse in January, March, April, and May, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, as per certificate of Second Comptroller numbered forty-one hundred and seventy eight, March twenty sixth, eighteen hundred and eighty five, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, forty dollars. To enable the Secretary of the Interior to make allotments of landsCrow Indians.Allotments in severalty.Vol. 22, p. 42. in severalty to the Crow Indians in Montana, as contemplated in the agreement with said Indians made June twelfth, eighteen hundred and eighty, ratified and confirmed by act of Congress approved April eleventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-two, two thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, the same to be available until June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-seven.
To pay the expenses of purchasing goods and supplies for the IndianPurchasing supplies. etc. service, including rent of warehouses, and pay of necessary employees, advertising at rates not exceeding regular commercial rates, inspection, and all other expenses connected therewith, including telegraphing, five thousand dollars. For this amount to be paid to the Pottawatomie Indians, or expendedPottawatomie Indians.Payment to.Vol. 15, p. 533. for their benefit under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, being the difference between the amount paid to said Indians in currency in the years eighteen hundred and sixty-three, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, eighteen hundred and sixty-five, eighteen hundred and sixty-six, and eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, and the sum due in coin, under their treaties of eighteen hundred and eighteen and eighteen hundred and twenty-nine, as required to be ascertained by article nine of the treaty of August seventh, eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, forty-nine thousand three hundred and eighty-two dollars and eight cents; but this provision shall not be held as precedent hereafter for the regulation or decision of any controversy between the Government of the United States and any parties whatsoever. national museum.Nat ion al Museum.
For expense of heating, lighting, and electrical and telephonic service,Heating, etc. six hundred and thirty-one dollars and sixty-seven cents. Preservation of collections, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andPreserving collections. prior years, one hundred and forty-nine dollars and sixteen cents. POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT.Post-Office Department. Compensation of postmasters: For amount retained by postmastersCompensation, postmasters. in excess of appropriation, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, two hundred and forty-three thousand eight hundred and forty-eight dollars and ninety-four cents.
Ship, steamboat, and way letters: For amount expended byShip, steamboat, and way letters. postmasters in excess of appropriation, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, three hundred and one dollars and eleven cents. Railroad transportation: For inland mail transportation byInland mail transportation, railroads. railroads, exclusive of transportation over roads operated, leased, or controlled by the Central Pacific, Union Pacific, Sioux City and Pacific, and Central Branch of the Union Pacific Railroad Companies:
To pay amounts found due on account of railroad transportation, one hundred and ten thousand two hundred and seventy-four dollars and eighty-eight cents, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four; to pay amounts found due on account of railroad transpor- 273 tation, sixty-four thousand and eighty-six dollars and two cents, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five: for inland mail transportation on railroad routes, four hundred and fifteen thousand dollars, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-six; in all, five hundred and eighty-nine thousand three hundred and sixty dollars and ninety cents.
The foregoing sums for the postal service shall be payable from thePayable from postal revenues. postal revenues of the respective years to which they are properly chargeable. To pay the amounts set forth in House Executive Document Two Hundred and Forty-five, first session Forty-ninth Congress, to postmasters, for stationery used during the fiscal year eighteen hundred andStationery. eighty-three, one thousand four hundred and seventy-six dollars and thirty-one cents. Clerk-hire:
To pay E. A. Grant, late postmaster atE. A. Grant.For clerk-hire. Fargo, Dakota, for clerk-hire during the fiscal years eighteen hundred and seventy-nine to eighteen hundred and eighty-two, inclusive, six thousand nine hundred and fifty dollars. The Postmaster-General is hereby directed to examine the claim of the United States andU.S. and Brazil Mail SteamsbipCo.Claim of, to be examined. Brazil Mail Steamship Company for carrying the United States mails during the fiscal year ended June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, and to report to Congress at its next session the amount of service so rendered and what sums injustice and equity he believed should be paid to said company for said service.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE.Department of Agriculture. To pay amount found due by the accounting officers of the Treasury on accountEntomological division. of investigating the history of insects injurious to agriculture, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, two dollars and eighty-two cents. improvement of grounds. For payment of employees for labor performed in the month of June,Employees, improvement of grounds. eighteen hundred and eighty-six, nine, hundred and sixty-nine dollars and ten cents.
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE.Department of Justice. For contingent expenses Department of Justice, as follows: For law andContingent expenses. miscellaneous books for library of the Department, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-three, five dollars. For law and miscellaneous books for office of the Solicitor of the Treasury,Books. being deficiencies as follows: For the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, five dollars; for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-three, five dollars; in all, ten dollars.
For miscellaneous expenditures of the Department of Justice, beingMiscellaneous expenses. deficiencies as follows: For the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one thousand four hundred and seventy dollars and ten cents; for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and thirty-six dollars and fifty-five cents; for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-three, fifty-three dollars and twenty-nine cents; in all, one thousand six hundred and fifty-nine dollars and ninety four cents.
For repairs to elevator and machinery, being for the service of theRepairs. fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, one hundred and forty-six dollars and fifty cents. For the necessary expenses incurred in defending suits against theDefense of suits against United States. United States, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, three hundred and ninety dollars and thirty-live cents. 274 judicial.Judicial. Fees and expenses of marshals: For fees and expenses ofMarshals’ fees, etc. marshals, United States courts twenty thousand dollars For fees and expenses of marshals, United States courts, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, twenty-four thousand four hundred and forty-seven dollars and forty-seven cents.
For fees and expenses of marshals, United States courts, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, ten thousand seven hundred and fifty-three dollars and seventeen cents. To enable the Attorney-General to pay to the legal representativesLegal representatives of Thomas Simons.Payment to. of Thomas Simons for services rendered in the case of the Choctaw Nation of Indians versus the United States, in the Court of Claims, between June third, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, and March second, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, two thousand five hundred dollars.
To pay William M. Rush, junior, for services rendered as assistantWilliam M. Rush, jr.Payment to. United States attorney for the western district of Missouri from July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, to January thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, eight hundred and seventy-five dollars. Fees of clerks: For fees of clerks, United States courts, being aClerks’ fees. deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, thirty-two thousand and forty-three dollars and fifty-three cents.
Fees OF commissioners: For fees of commissioners, and justices ofCommissioners’ fees.*Proviso*.Allowance for issuing writs, etc. the peace acting as commissioners, fifty thousand dollars: *Provided*, That for issuing any warrant or writ and for any other necessary service commissioners may be paid the same compensation as is allowed to clerks for like services, but they shall not be entitled to any docket-fees. For fees of commissioners, and justices of the peace acting as Commissioners, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, twenty-four thousand eight hundred and fifty-six dollars and twenty-two cents.
Fees of witnesses: For fees of witnesses, United States courts, fifty thousand dollars.Witnesses’ fees. For fees of witnesses, United States courts, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, four thousand four hundred and forty dollars. Fees of jurors: For fees of jurors, twenty-five thousand dollars.Jnrors’ fees.Rent of courtrooms. Rent of United States courtrooms: For rent of United States courtrooms, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, six thousand nine hundred and forty-two dollars and seventy cents.
For rent of United States courtroom, being a deficiency for the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one thousand nine hundred and forty-three dollars. Miscellaneous expenses: For miscellaneous expenses of United StatesMiscellaneous expenses. courts, ten thousand dollars. Territorial courts in Utah: For expenses of Territorial courts in Utah,Utah. four thousand dollars. For expenses of Territorial courts in Utah, being a deficiency for theTerritorial courts. fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, two thousand and thirty-three dollars and fifteen cents.
Support of insane convicts: To enable the Attorney-General to Support of insane convicts.pay the State Asylum for Insane Criminals at Auburn, New York, for the care and support of United States convicts, seven hundred and seventy-three dollars and twenty-nine cents. To pay Henry Fink, late United States marshal for the eastern DistrictHenry Fink.Payment to. of Wisconsin, amount of judgments for costs recovered of him in the case of the United States versus Christian Sallentine and others, ninety-five dollars and eighty cents. 275 JUDGMENTS COURT OF CLAIMS.
For payment of the judgments of the Court of Claims, as follows:Judgments Court of Claims. To Edward L. Jordan, one thousand one hundred and forty-five dollars; the New York Consolidated Card Company, four thousand two hundred and twenty-one dollars and fifty cents; James H. McLean, one thousand and thirty dollars; Joseph Burnett and Company, one hundred and eighty-three dollars and sixty cents; the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, five hundred and thirteen dollars and forty cents;
Ray V. Pierce, three hundred and forty-eight dollars; Augustus Vogeler and Company, one thousand six-hundred and seventy-two dollars and eighty cents; Andrew Dougherty, three thousand eight hundred and forty dollars; Herman! Tappan, four hundred and forty dollars; Wells, Richardson and Company,two hundred and forty dollars; Andrew S. Lowe, one hundred and twelve dollars and twenty cents; Weeks and Potter, seven hundred and twenty-five dollars; Johnston Holloway and Company, one hundred and sixty-eight dollars;
E. W. Hoyt and Company, seven hundred and thirty dollars; Vogeler, Meyer and Company, three hundred and eighty-two dollars and fifty cents; Charles N. Crittenron, three hundred and seventy-five dollars; Russell, Morgan and Company, two hundred and ten dollars; George G. Green, one thousand and ninety-two dollars and twenty-four cents; Joseph H. Schenck and Son, four hundred and twenty dollars; Henry Tetlow and Brother, one hundred and eighty dollars; Hiscox and Company, ninety dollars; 1).
Ransom, Son and Company, three hundred and fifty-three dollars and sixty cents; the Merchant’s Gargling Oil Company, three hundred and sixteen dollars and twenty-one cents; James E. Schwartz and Company, two hundred dollars; the Anglo-American Drug Company, two hundred and twenty dollars; Mette and Kanne, thirty dollars; Calvin E. Hull and Company, forty dollars and eight cents; Thomas J. Husband, one hundred and ninety-one dollars and twenty cents; Doctor D. Jayne and Son, one thousand seven hundred and sixty-four dollars and thirty-one cents;
Kennedy and Company, two hundred and five dollars and thirty-six cents; Daniel F. Hutchinson, thirty dollars; William Cromey, executor of John Bull, deceased, three hundred and forty-two dollars; William Bond and Company, one hundred and sixty dollars; Curtis and Brown, Manufacturing Company Limited, forty-six dollars and fifty cents; Jeremiah Curtis and Sons, four hundred and forty dollars; B. Barnwell Sams, administrator, one hundred and eighty-one dollars and sixty-three cents;
J. Julius Sams, one hundred and eighty-one dollars and sixty-three cents; George A. Brandreth, executor, two thousand and sixty dollars; William Henry Comstock, one hundred and fifty-two dollars; J. S. Johnson and Company, one hundred and ninety-two dollars; the Rumford Chemical Works, one hundred and ten dollars; Edward E. Bradbury, one thousand nine hundred and fifty dollars; Morgan and Maddux, six hundred and fifty dollars; John Conley, five hundred dollars; Francis M. Tanner, survivor of Tanner and Hayes, seven hundred and fifty dollars;
Dewitt C. Redgrave, twenty-six dollars and eighty-five cents; the Pacific Railroad, forty-four thousand eight hundred dollars and seventy-four cents; the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company, fifty-one thousand three hundred and fifty-one dollars and ninety-one cents; William H. Taylor, one hundred and fifty-two dollars; John H. Wallace, one thousand and thirty-two dollars; William R. Merriam, two thousand eight hundred and seventy-seven dollars and nineteen cents; Benjamin U.
Keyser, receiver, eight hundred and five dollars and seventeen cents; David H. Cuthbert, receiver, one hundred and eighty-four dollars and seventy-five cents; Foster L. Balch, receiver, seven hundred and fifty-three dollars and forty-nine cents; Lester S. Willson, receiver, one hundred and forty-two dollars and sixty-three cents; Otis R. Glover, receiver, one thousand and sixty-five dollars and twenty-five cents; C. F. Fleming, five dollars and seventy-one cents; James Adger, forty-five dollars and 276 sixty-four cents;
Susan D. Adger, forty-seven dollars and ninety-twoJudgments Court of Claims—Continued. cents; Jane Adger, thirty-one dollars and ninety-five cents; J. E. Adger, twenty-two dollars and eighty cents; J. B. J. and J. E. Adger, twenty-nine dollars and sixty-seven cents; M. A. Parker, twenty-seven dollars and thirty-nine cents; Robert Adger, sixty-nine dollars and thirty cents; Robert Adger, trustee, two hundred and ninety-six dollars and sixty-six cents; Robert Adger, trustee, forty-one dollars and eight cents;
Robert Adger trustee, thirty-one dollars and ninety-five cents; George K. Otis, sixteen thousand four hundred and forty-five dollars and thirty-six cents; Huntington W. Jackson, receiver, six thousand three hundred and sixty-two dollars and eighty-nine cents; James M. Rhett, one hundred and eighteen dollars and thirty-three cents; Lyman B. Perkins, one hundred dollars; Soloman Max and Abraham Hoffheimer, two hundred and eighty-eight dollars; Michael J. Greaiish, six hundred dollars;
Bowers and Dunham, two hundred and eighty-five dollars; Frederick Brown, one hundred and nineteen dollars and thirty-three cents; the Centaur Company, three hundred and one dollars and fifty cents; Seabury and Johnson, one hundred and sixty-five dollars; the Holman Pad Company, ninety-two dollars and eighty-six cents; David M. Richardson, four thousand two hundred and fifty dollars; Schmitt and Schmittdiel one thousand and fifty-eight dollars and ninety-five cents; Barclay and Company, ninety-four dollars and twenty-five cents;
George H. Palmer, two thousand two hundred and fifty-six dollars and seventy-five, cents; Ryder, Crounse and Welch, fifty dollars; William B. Gates, executor, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-seven dollars and fourteen cents; John A. Jones, two hundred and twenty dollars; Samuel G. Lawtou, three hundred and fifty-two dollars and sixty-six cents: Cato Ashe Seabrooke, administrator, two hundred and three dollars and nineteen cents; Van Schaick and Company, six thousand four hundred and thirty-three dollars and forty-nine cents;
Anuie B. Graham, administratrix, two thousand four hundred and forty-five dollars; Thomas D. Grifiin, three hundred and twenty-one dollars and forty-four cents; Daniel Donovan, nine hundred and thirty dollars; William J. Landram, four thousand seven hundred and twenty-four dollars and seventy-eight cents; John F. Henry, Cunan and Company, two hundred and four dollars and seventy-one cents; Jacob 0. Harper, one hundred and forty-five dollars; Henry Kettler, one thousand dollars;
Joseph Loebr, one thousand and ninety-five dollars; Charles Busch, two hundred and sixty-nine dollars and fifty cents; the J. C. Ayer Company, nine hundred and eighteen dollars; R. P. Hall and Company, one hundred and sixty dollars; the Sioux City and Pacific Railroad Company, eighty-two thousand seven hundred and sixty-five dollars and eighty cents; the Connecticut Mutual Life-Insurance Company, eleven thousand four hundred and fifty dollars; John Scberling, administrator, ten thousand nine hundred and one dollars and fifty cents;
William L. Bryan, eight hundred and six dollars; Edward A. Blount, administrator, nine hundred and sixty-five dollars and forty-three cents; John H. Kimmons, eighty-five dollars; Vileor Vallot, five hundred and thirty-seven dollars and twenty cents; Samuel Patterson, one hundred and fifty-six dollars; Anson C. Merrick, four hundred and thirty-five dollars; J. W, Payne, four hundred and twenty-two dollars; James T. Spann, two hundred dollars; A. J. Perdue, one thousand five hundred and twenty-four dollars;
James G. Harrison, forty-six dollars; John S. Fowler, one hundred and twelve dollars; J. W. Burton, three hundred and thirty-two dollars; A. T, Summey, three hundred and sixty-two dollars; John S. Bradford, one thousand two hundred and ninety-four dollars; W. I), McKinstry, one hundred and sixty-eight dollars; Frank Hardin,two hundred and eleven dollars; Samuel B. Grail, one thousand two hundred and eleven dollars; William Paterson, one hundred and thirty-two dollars; J. H. Finks, one hundred and thirty-six dollars;
Robert Barber, three thousand one hundred and ninety-one dollars; W. C. Robards, fifty-three dollars; James Brizzolara, three thou- 277 sand five hundred and seventy-five dollars: James O. Ladd, four hundred and eighty-eight dollars; Bushrod W. Bell, six hundredJudgments Court of Claims—Continued. dollars; William G. Bogle, three hundred dollars; George M. Bond, three hundred and fifty-seven dollars; Isaac N. Cardozo, nine hundred and thirty dollars; L. Congleton,twohundred and three dollars;
William W. Gilbert, two thousand four hundred and seventy-six dollars; Henry D.Fitzgerald, four hundred and fifty dollars; Chester B. Hinsdill, one hundred and nine dollars; Philip A. Hoyne, one thousand seven hundred and fifty-six dollars; Henry L. Jeffers, seven hundred and ninety-seven dollars; John D. Jordan, one hundred and ninety-five dollars; Orville D. Laird, one hundred and forty dollars; Eugene O. Locke, fifty-four dollars; E. E. Marvin, one hundred and ninety-three dollars;
Stephen 0. McCandless, two hundred and seven dollars; Matthew F. Pleasants, one hundred and twenty-eight dollars; M. T. Roberts, two hundred and twenty-five dollars; William E. Singleton, seventy-eight dollar’s; Samuel Thompson, six hundred and seventy-six dollars; Stephen Wheeler, three thousand nine hundred and seventy-one dollars; A. Winslow, one hundred and seventy-five dollars; Elias S. Falkenbnrg, one hundred and fifty-six dollars; Joseph M.Stafford, five hundred and thirty dollars;
Lafayette Greene, seventy-six dollars; Benjamin L. Benedict,two hundred and seventy-four dollars; Gustave Anderson, one hundred and eighteen dollars; Joseph C. Finnell, one hundred and eleven dollars; H, A. Forney, three hundred and eighty-one dollars; A. M. Gudger, one hundred and seventeen dollars; Barnett Wilson, seven hundred and one dollars; Samuel Levy,one hundred and thirty-six dollars; JamesBcntly, one hundred and forty-seven dollars; Ashley, Wetherbee and Watson, two hundred and eighty-one dollars and seventeen cents;
C. Ashworth, one thousand one hundred and thirty-six dollars and twenty-eight cents; G. Buckingham, junior, thirty-eight dollars and eighty-eight cents; George and Samuel Brown, four hundred and nineteen dollars and ninety-six cents; George and Samuel Brown and Company, one thousand and eleven dollars and ninety cents; Theo. Berdell, five hundred and fifty-one dollars and one cent; A. Frank and Brother, two hundred and eighty-six dollars and fifty-six cents; Dater and Timpson, six hundred and four dollars and ninety-six cents;
Gwynue and Day, six hundred and seventy-eight dollars and sixty-four cents; Evans, Wharton and Company, three hundred and fifty-five dollars and seventy cents; L. G. Florance, one hundred and two dollars and twenty-three cents; W. S. Hale and Company, one hundred and fifty dollars and fifty-seven cents; Johnson and Day, four hundred and four dollars and eighty-six cents; Kellogg and Parker, eighty-nine dollars and sixty-eight cents; Lange, Boell and Arming, three hundred and fifty-four dollars and sixty cents;
R. L. Livingston, three hundred and twenty-three dollars and thirty-eight cents; Moran and Gould, one hundred and eighty-seven dollars and forty-three cents; Heury Meigs, junior, one hundred and sixty-three dollars and forty-two cents; Heury Meigs, junior, and Smith, eleven dollars and ninety-eight cents; Mason, Cox and Smith, three hundred and twenty-seven dollars and nine cents; Manning and De Forest, four hundred and twenty-five dollars and forty cents; Putnam and Earle, two hundred and fifty-five dollars and sixty-eight cents;
N. D. Putnam, one hundred and nineteen dollars and sixty-three cents; William Parker, twenty-nine dollars and seventy-six cents; J. J. Pardee and Company, three hundred and fifty-eight dollars and eighty-two cents; J. D. Prince, five hundred and forty-three dollars and thirty-four cents; Stokes and Saltonstall, one hundred and thirty-four dollars and thirty-five cents; Charles Stokes, one hundred and fifteen dollars and twenty cents; Speyer and Moran, eight hundred and twenty-four dollars and eleven cents;
Scranton and Scoville, nine hundred and forty-one dollars and seventeen cents; Smith, Seaver and Bowen, two hundred and forty-three dollars and thirty-one cents; Francis Ringeling, trustee, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-four dollars and sixteen cents; Alexander Taylor and Son, two hundred and twenty 278 dollars and forty-one cents; Underbill, Haven «mid Company, five hundredJudgments Court of Claims—Continued. and sixty-five dollars and ninety-four cents; Stewart and Mattison, one hundred and thirty-seven dollars andthirty-tbree cents;
Vandeventer and Company, one hundred and thirty-one dollars and eighty-six cents; Wittemore and Mott, one hundred and twenty dollars and ten cents; Barney, Raymond and Company, seven hundred and eighty-five dollars and forty-eight cents; John S. Barry and Company, one thousand three hundred and twenty-seven dollars and sixty cents; Day and Morse, four hundred and ninety-one dollars and forty-five cents; William M. Earle, twenty two dollars and ninety-eight cents; Eames and Moore, one hundred and ninety-nine dollars and ninety-five cents;
Fowler, Osgood and Company, four hundred and eighteen dollars and sixty-two cents; Gray, Prince and Company, two thousand six hundred and eighty-seveu dollars and thirteen cents; D. C. Hays and Company, three hundred and twenty-one dollars and eight cents; Durant and Earle, three hundred and ninety-two dollars and forty-five cents; De Rose and Tilghman, two hundred and sixty-five dollars and seventy-seven cents; C. F. Davenport, one hundred and nine dollars and seventy-six cents;
Derkheim, Cox and Kemeys, eighty-four dollars and sixteen cents; Hoyt and Gardner, eight hundred and forty-seven dollars and ninety-one cents; H. C. Hardy and Sou, five hundred and forty-four dollars and nine cents; Kemeys and Cox,one thousand three hundred and eighty-one dollars and twenty-three cents; Jacob Little and Company, two thousand three hundred and eleven dollars and sixty-eight cents; Adam, Kimball and Moore, four hundred and fifty two dollars and eight cents; J. C.
Atterbury, sixty-three dollars and eighty cents; Alley and Lawrence, one thousand two hundred and thirty-seven dollars and twenty-three cents; Robert S. Anderson, sixty-two dollars and seventy one cents; T. M. Burton and Company, one hundred and ninety-five dollars and forty-nine cents; Beers and Edwards, five hundred and eighty-four dollars and fifty-four cents; Bolles and Company, two hundred and eighty dollars and eighty-four cents: John Bunner and Company, three thousand and four dollars and seventy-seven cents;
Britton, Van Vechton and Markham, two hundred and seventy-six dollars and ninety-four cents; Boyd, Falls and Vincent, one hundred and ninety-three dollars and ninety-five cents; Baldwin and Weeks, four thousand two hundred and five dollars and fifty cents; Barnard L. Smyth, two hundred and forty-six dollars and fifty-nine cents; Boyd, Vincent and Company, one thousand and ninety-three dollars and ninety-eight cents; Coleman Benedict, one thousand three hundred and fifty dollars and twenty-four cents;
Condict, Jennings and Company, one hundred and sixty-nine dollars and fifty-five cents; Chase,McClure and Company, two hundred and seventy-four dollars and thirty-six cents; Corue and James, four hundred and twenty-one dollars and twenty-seven cents; Davis and Son, three hundred and thirty-four dollars and seventy-nine cents; Delafield and Fitch, one hundred and ninety-four dollars and sixty-three cents; Dean, McGinnis and Company, eight thousand seven hundred and fifty-three dollars and thirty-eight cents;
Decoppet and Tiers, one hundred and ninety-three dollars and eighty-two cents; Domett and Nichols, one thousand and forty-nine dollars and eighty-nine cents; T. F. Durant, seven hundred and seventy-one dollars and five cents; Fanshawe and Milliken, three hundred and eighty dollars; A. Morton Ferris and Brother, two thousand and six dollars and ninety-three cents; Fitch and Company, seven hundred and ninety-two dollars and twenty-seven cents; Fitch and Bowen, three thousand seven hundred and fifty-six dollars and sixty-five cents;
Earle and Saltonstall, thirty-eight dollars and seventy-six cents; Gibson, Beadlestou and Company, one thousand eight hundred and forty-nine dollars and sixty cents; Gibson, Caranova and Company, two thousand five hundred and fifteen dollars and sixteen cents; David Groesbeck and Company, three thousand three hundred and forty-eight dollars and eighty-two cents; Edward Haight and Com- 279 pany, eight hundred and forty-eight dollars and fifty-nine cents; B. HallJudgments Court of Claims—Continued. and Young, fifty-five dollars and ninety-two cents;
G. L and L. Haight, one hundred and fifty-two dollars and sixty-two cents; A. G. Heminway and Company, one hundred and thirteen dollars and seventy-eight cents; H. L. Horton and Company, six hundred and thirty dollars and thirty-one cents; Hone and Nicholas, six hundred and seventy-nine dollars; Hutchinson and Ditnmick, one hundred and forty-two dollars and eighty-six cents; Hutchinson and Broas, five hundred and seventy-five dollars and nineteen cents; Jacqueline and Decoppet, seven hundred and sixteen dollars and seventy-five cents;
Kissam and Company, three thousand one hundred and seven dollars and forty-nine cents; Latham, Alexander and Company, two hundred and twenty-one dollars and sixty-nine cents; August Limbert, four hundred and ten dollars and seventy-six cents; August Limbert and Company, nine hundred and twenty-one dollars and sixty-four cents; Lockwood and Davenport, one thousand nine hundred and fifty-nine dollars and twenty-four cents; Maxwell and Graves, one thousand four hundred and fifty-two dollars and sixty-five cents;
Meserole and Trumbull, six hundred and twenty-three dollars and ninety-six cents; Mills, Robeson and Smith, two hundred and fifty dollars and seventy-one cents; Miller and Walsh, three hundred dollars and seventy-five cents; William B. Mott and Company, six hundred and eighty-four dollars and thirty-eight cents; W. D. Moore and Company, two hundred and thirty-three dollars and six cents; David M. Morrison, five hundred and sixty-two dollars and eighteen cents; B. Murray, junior, four hundred and eighty-one dollars and sixty-five cents;
Osgood Brothers, six thousand and sixty-nine dollars and thirty-five cents; Osborn and Chapin, one thousand three hundred and ninety-eight dollars and seventeen cents; F. P. and H, L. Olcott, nine hundred and fifty-five dollars and thirty-four cents; Paulding and Slosson, two hundred and seventy-nine dollars and seven cents; Pearl and Company, one hundred and eighty-eight dollars and fifty-four cents; Puleston, Raymond and Company, two thousand four hundred and ninety dollars and eighty-three cents;
E. D. Randolph and Company, ten thousand six hundred and fifty-seven dollars and two cents; Rasmus and Lesignola, two hundred and seventy-one dollars and ten cents; Rollins and Company, three hundred and five dollars and sixty cents; Randall and Weiram, three hundred dollars and sixty cents; Schafer Brothers,one thousand eight hundred and twelve dollars and fifty-three cents; Smith, Randolph and Company, one thousand two hundred and ninety dollars and ninety-eight cents; M. F.
Smith and Decoppet, four hundred and sixty dollars and thirty-six cents; D. Henry Smith, five hundred and forty-two dollars and fifty-nine cents; William Alexander Smith and Company, one hundred and ninety dollars and forty-six cents; C. S. Sloane and Company, two thousand seven hundred and eleven dollars and twenty-three cents; Suydain and Vineent, eighty-nine dollars and thirty-three cents; Robert Stuyvesant, eighty-one dollars and sixty-six cents; Stuyvesant and De Wolf, two thousand and fifty-two dollars and nine cents;
Sturtevant and Goadby, one hundred and fifteen dollars and thirty-six cents; Stoker, Taylor and Company, two thousand three hundred and forty dollars and seventy-three cents; William and Joseph Taylor, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-eight dollars and fifty two cents; Tanner and Company, three thousand one hundred and forty-six dollars and twenty-eight cents; Taintor and Dyett, two hundred and sixty-eight dollars and eighty-seven cents; Towar and Learned, eight hundred and fifty-two dollars and ninety-two cents;
Utley and Dougherty, one hundred and sixty-eight dollars and eighty-five cents; J. F. Underhill and Company, eight hundred and eighty-three dollars and fifty-two cents; Van Vechten and Moore, eighty-six dollars and ninety-seven cents; Henry T. Verhaven and Company, eight hundred and seventy-one dollars and two cents; Francis T. Walker, four hundred and eighteen dollars and seventy-three cents; Weston and 280 De Billier, three hundred and five dollars and ninety-three cents; WheelerJudgments Court of Claims—Continued. and Peters, two thousand one hundred and forty-four dollars and forty-nine cents;
W. G. Wiley and Company, nine hundred and forty-two dollars and sixty-one cents; William H. Whittingham,nine hundred and ninety-five dollars and forty-five cents; W. G. Wiley, one hundred and forty-four dollars and thirty-eight cents; C. E. Wood, four hundred and eighty dollars and eighty-five cents; Wollberg and Company, three hundred and eighty-one dollars and eighty-eight cents; Wood and Davis, three hundred and seventy-two dollars and ninety-three cents; A. Wolff, junior, and Company, one thousand nine hundred and ninety-three dollars and thirty cents;
W. E. Young, one hundred and twenty-one dollars and sixty-five cents; Thomas N. Cooper, two thousand six hundred and eighty-six dollars and thirty-two cents; John Paul Jones, administrator, eighty-one thousand two hundred and fifty dollars; Henry R. Philbrick, two hundred and fourteen dollars and eighty-eight cents; Leuoir M. Erwin, four hundred and two dollars; Marion Erwin, two hundred and thirty-three dollars; Edward C. Wade, one hundred and seventy-nine dollars; Richard D.
Locke, one hundred and forty-nine dollars; Maner L. Wade, seventy-nine dollars; Samuel M. Griffin, forty dollars; John M. Allred, three hundred and forty-five dollars; James D. Brady, two hundred and ninety-five dollars and eighty-three cents; John E. Blaine, two thousand two hundred and eighty-three dollars and forty-three cents; Culver Barcalow, three thousand five hundred and seventy-seven dollars and sixty-eight cents; Ellery M. Brayton, one thousand and three dollars and seventy-four cents;
James C. Brown, two hundred and thirty-six dollars and eighty-three cents; Beverly B. Botts, three thousand and twenty dollars and seventy-three cents; George W. Brown, five hundred and thirty-four dollars and eighty-two cents; Webster Bruce, one thousand and fifty-five dollars and fifty-nine cents; Ann Bruce, administratrix, three hundred and eight dollars and sixteen cents; William W. Bruner, administrator, one thousand two hundred and thirty-six dollars and seven cents; Alonzo B.
Carroll, two hundred and twenty-nine dollars and twenty-nine cents; Andrew Clark, one thousand four hundred and forty-two dollars and thirty cents; John C. Carpenter, five hundred and seventy-nine dollars and twenty-seven cents; Edward H. Chase, two hundred and seventy-one dollars and forty-nine cents; John A. J. Creswell, administrator, four hundred and eight dollars and seventy-five cents; Henry M. Cooper, five hundred and fifty eight dollars and eight cents; Lucien B. Crooker, three hundred and fifty-one dollars and eleven cents;
CharlesC. Dame, nine hundred and seventeen dollars and ten cents; Philip Doppler, nine hundred dollars and thirty-six cents; George P. Dunham, one thousand four hundred and seventy-two dollars and three cents; Isaac H. Duval, one thousand two hundred and eighty-two dollars and sixty-one cents; Sewall 8 Farwell, six hundred and fifty-one dollars and fifteen cents; Amos L. Frost, two thousand one hundred and eighty-five dollars and fifty-seven cents; John W. Green, one thousand one hundred and thirty-two dollars and ninety cents;
David F. Hollister, seven hundred and fifty-nine dollars and thirty three cents; Samuel M. Jackson, two hundred and ninety-five dollars and eighty-nine cents; Walter H. Johnson, three thousand and eighty-six dollars and eighty-five cents; John N. Knapp, four hundred and ninety-six dollars and twenty-one cents; Robert P. Kennedy, two thousand nine hundred and seventy-nine dollars and twenty-two cents; John F. Kumler, eight hundred and seventy-three dollars and ninety-eight cents;
James M. Melton, one thousand three hundred and sixty-three dollars and fortÿ-eight cents; John J. Mott, two thousand six hundred and fifty-eight dollars and seventy-four cents; Charles W. Pavey, one thousand one hundred and forty-seven dollars and twenty-four cents; Jewett Palmer, two hundred and forty-four dollars and thirty-nine cents; Francis H. Pierpout, one thousand five hundred and forty-five dollars and thirty-eight cents; James Pursell, two thousand seven hundred and 281 eighty-three dollars and forty-one cents;
Worthy S. Streator, five hundredJudgments Court of Claims—Continued. and sixty-one dollars and eight cents; Lampson P. Sherman, seven hundred and fifty-three dollars and fifteen cents; David A. Stewart, sixty-one dollars and fifty-two cents; Edward G. Selden, administrator, two thousand six hundred and twenty-three dollars and sixty-four cents; Moses D. Stivers, eight hundred and fifty-seven dollars and eighty-two cents; Edward Scull, one thousand five hundred and fifty-five dollars and eighty-five cents;
James Stuart, administrator, one thousand five hundred dollars; John M. Sullivan, one thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; William P. Tatem, two thousand one hundred and thirty-three dollars and thirty-eight cents; Edward R. Tinker, two thousand three hundred and seventy-seven dollars and fifty-two cents; William Umbdenstock, seventy-one dollars and twenty-one cents; J. T. Valentine, one thousand two hundred and fifty-three dollars and fifty cents; James C. Veatch, one thousand five hundred and fifty-six dollars and twenty-seven cents;
Edward C. Wade, eighty-two dollars and forty-three cents; Charles C. Walcutt, two thousand four hundred and ninety-one dollars and ninety-fivecents; Edward Wheeler,four hundred and eighty-seven dollars and thirty-eight cents; William £1. Wheeler, nine hundred and eighty-six dollars and eighty-six cents; Jonathan C. Willis, six hundred and eighty-eight dollars and twenty cents; Elilin A, White, three hundred and sixty-two dollars and forty-six cents; William M. Woodcock, one thousand and twenty-one dollars and ten cents;
Andrew II. Young, five hundred and twenty-nine’dollars and ninety-four cents; Bettie N. Young, administratrix, four hundred and forty-nine dollars and eighty-four cents; Alfred Hobbs, one thousand three hundred and seventy-two dollars; J. W. Beck, six hundred and forty-six dollars; William Wright, three hundred and sixty-one dollars; A. E. Buck, one hundred and thirty-two dollars; William C. Wells, three hundred and forty-eight dollars; James H. Bone, one thousand three hundred and eighty-two dollars;
F. W. Giraud, one hundred and thirty-nine dollars; Thomas S. Atkins, one hundred and nine dollars; George Patterson, twenty-one dollars; A. J. Perdue, six hundred and ninety-three dollars; John L. Thornley, five hundred and fifty dollars; E. M. Seabrook, one hundred and fifty-two dollars; S. Rodmond Smith, one hundred and one dollars; Aaron Collins, one thousand one hundred and sixty-eight dollars; James A. Bledsoe, one hundred and seventy-two dollars; John M. Langston, seven thousand six hundred and sixty-six dollars and sixty-six cents;
Henrietta M. Paynter, two hundred and seventy-four dollars and fifty-one cents; John C. Cooper, three hundred and ninety-one dollars and forty-five cents; John T. Patterson, eight hundred and sixty-four dollars; Scarborough A. Norris, one hundred and thirty dollars; Alfred T. Dillard, four hundred and seven dollars; John W. Calder, one hundred and nineteen dollars; Mervin B. Converse, forty dollars; Joseph M. Stafford, one thousand and fifty dollars; Charles Brietz, one hundred and eighty-seven dollars;
Charles H. Bill, two hundred and sixty-five dollars; Paul Ravesies, one hundred and twenty-eight dollars; Robert Barber, five hundred and sixty-three dollars and ninety cents; John R. Carey/one hundred and twenty-four dollars; John T. Green, one hundred and six dollars; Hugh C. Hamilton, sixty-two dollars; John C. Moore, seven hundred and twenty-seven dollars; A. W. McCullough, five hundred and thirty-two dollars; J. C. Wilson, one hundred and seventy dollars; John H. Wallace, eight hundred and three dollars;
John G. White, administrator, seven hundred and thirty-six dollars; Lamar C. Quintero, administrator, one thousand six hundred and eighty-nine dollars; William G. Lane, tw*o thousand four hundred and eighteen dollars; William H. Hunter, eight hundred and seventy-two dollars; John J. Allen, six thousand nine hundred and sixty-two dollars; Edward M. Rand, six hundred and forty-five dollars; Sarah E. Ramsay and Anna E. Wagner, one thousand seven hundred dollars; Bernard Zwart, forty-nine dollars;
Joseph Ricketts, four hundred and forty dollars; Henry L. Carrol], six hundred and forty-seven dollars; Washington P. Parker, 282 two hundred and twenty-three dollars; Chancellor Hartson, eight hundredJudgments Court of Claims—Continued. and forty-four dollars and forty-five cents; R. D. Frayser,.administrator, three hundred and sixty-six dollars and forty-four cents; John S. Toof, administrator, four hundred and thirteen dollars and seven cents; John M. Landon, one thousand three hundred and twenty-seven dollars;
James O. Ladd, one hundred and twenty dollars; James A. Murray, eight hundred and ninety-eight dollars; William A. Rose, ninety dollars; James C. Saunders, one thousand six hundred and twenty-seven dollars; Henry E. Young, administrator, two hundred and sixty-three dollars and sixty cents; Charles E. Coffin, administrator, two hundred and sixty-three dollars and sixty cents; Robert W. Shand, administrator, two hundred and sixty-two dollars and thirty-one cents; Robert W. Shand, trustee, one dollar and twenty-nine cents;
William W. Brown, three hundred and nine dollars; Thomas F. Bowman, five hundred and fifty-one dollars; Hostetter and Smith, one thousand nine hundred and seventy-one dollars; Samuel Henry, five hundred and sixteen dollars; John M. Allred, one hundred and fifty-six dollars; John L. Conley, nine hundred and five dollars; W. C. Smith, eight hundred and eighty seven dollars; L. G. Pirkle, six hundred and fifteen dollars; John Graves, four hundred and twenty-eight dollars; James G.
Hawthorne, one thousand four hundred and twenty-four dollars; Will Haight, five hundred and four dollars; A. W. Caldwell, two hundred and ninety-seven dollars; Orlando McClendon, eight hundred and thirty-one dollars; Cadwallader J. Pride, two hundred and twenty-five dollars; Matthew R. Cullen, three hundred and ten dollars; Joseph Clark, fifty-two dollars; Isaac Beckett, one hundred and ninety dollars; Michael A. McGowan, four thousand four hundred and forty-four dollars and thirty eight cents;
Paul Ravesies, one thousand and seventy dollars; Charles L. Adams, seven hundred and thirty-seven dollars; Isaac N. Cardozo, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-five dollars; Charles M. Dennison, two hundred and five dollars; William W. Gilbert, three hundred and sixty-five dollars; Charles B. Faris, one thousand four hundred and fifty-nine dollars; E. B. Harrison, nine hundred and sixty-six dollars; Abner Hazeltine, three hundred and seventy-seven dollars; James A. Murray, seven hundred and twenty-five dollars;
Mark McDonough, five hundred and four dollars; A. Q. Moore, fifty-three dollars; C. W. Nottingham, ninety-three dollars; John E. Pound, six hundred and thirty-three dollars; Stephen Roberts, three hundred and forty-seven dollars; Gustavus A. Scroggs, two hundred and eighty-two dollars; J. A. Thoru, six hundred and niue dollars; Joseph Ricketts, two hundred and fifty-five dollars; George L. Douglass, three hundred and twenty-eight, dollars and thirty-five cents; Anne H. Elliott, five hundred and five dollars and uiuety-three cents, and Emily Elliott, five hundred and five dollars and ninety-three cents:
John I, Brown and Sous, four hundred and forty-five dollars; John Boud, seventy-two dollars and twenty-seven cents; in all, six hundred and eighty-three thousand seven hundred and forty-four dollars and forty-nine cents; together with a further sum sufficient to pay the interest on the judgments in favor of the said Edward L. Jordan, John H. Wallace, William J. Landram, and John M. Langston, respectively, under section one thousand and ninety of the Revised Statutes, from the date of presen-tation for payment until paid, at five per centum per annum: *Provided*, That none of the judgments herein provided for shall be paid until the right of appeal shall have expired.
To pay Albert Grant for interest, at five per centum per annum, onAlbert Grant.Payment of interest on j u d g-ment of Court of Claims. judgment of Court of Claims for fourteen thousand and sixteen dollars and twenty-nine cents, from January seventeenth, eighteen hundred and seventy, the date the original transcript was filed with the Secretary of the Treasury, until paid, a sufficient sum to pay the same, the principal of the judgment having been appropriated for by the act making appropriations to supply deficiencies in the appropriations for eight- 283 een hundred and eighty-four, and for other purposes, approved July seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-four.
For payment of judgments and awards recovered against the UnitedPayment of judgments, etc., on account of overflowed lands, by reason of Government dam at Menasha, Wis.Vol. 23, p. 451. States reported by the Attorney-General under the provisions of chapter three hundred and fifty-nine of the laws of eighteen hundred and eighty-five, approved March third, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, Executive Document (first session Forty-ninth Congress) Number Two hundred and Seven, as follows:
To pay Augustus G. Ruggles amount of judgment recovered by him against the United States for damages and costs, twenty-twothousandtwo hundred and eighty-seven dollars and six cents; to pay James K. Pumpelly, Edwin C. Gray, and Frank L. Jones, as administrator of the estate of George J. Pumpelly, deceased, amount of judgment recovered by them against the United States, December thirteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy-six, ten thousand one hundred and sixty-four dollars and fifty-seven cents; to pay John S.
McDonald amount awarded him against the United States, November thirteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, for flowage of lands by reason of Government dams at Menasha, Wisconsin, seventeen thousand five hundred and eighty-seven dollars and seventy-three cents; to pay Peter Armond amount awarded him against the United States, November thirteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, for flowage of lands by reason of Government dams at Menasha, Wisconsin, two hundred and sixty-eight dollars and eighty cents; to pay Fisher Jewson amount awarded him against the United States, November thirteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, for flowage of lands by reason of Government dams at Menasha, Wisconsin, three hundred and eighty-four dollars; to pay Richard Jewson and Richard Jewson, junior, amount awarded therein against the United States, November thirteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, for flowage of lands by reason of Government dams at Menasha, Wisconsin, six hundred and fourteen dollars; to pay J.
D. Bud amount awarded him against the United States, October fourteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, for flowage of lands by reason of Government daws at Menasha, Wisconsin, four hundred and fifty dollars. For payment of unappealed awards and judgments rendered againstJudgments against United States for damages caused by improvement of Fox and Wisconsin Rivers. the United States for flowage damages caused by the improvement of the Fox and Wisconsin Rivers, in the State of Wisconsin, as follows:
William H. Jenkyns, nine hundred and sixty dollars; Charles Miller, four hundred dollars; George H. Mansur, seven hundred and seventy-two dollars and fifty cents; Edley Payne, one thousand one hundred dollars; Peter Grattan, seven hundred and five dollars; John N. Kid, nine hundred dollars; Kate Jenkyns, two hundred dollars; William Clements, three hundred and ten dollars; Frank Walker, four hundred and fifty-five dollars and fifty cents; L. H. Eaton, six hundred and eighty-seven dollars and fifty cents;
Tilley Walker, five hundred dollars; Tertullins Spaulding, nine hundred and ten dollars; E. P. and William Sill, four hundred and thirty dollars; William Sill, seven hundred and sixty dollars; Amos D. Page, seven hundred and sixty dollars; Patrick Hussey, thirty dollars; Joseph Strobe, nine hundred and sixty dollars; R. J. Radick, one hundred and thirty-five dollars; Samuel Neff, four hundred and fifty-five dollars; Patrick Morrissey, executor of the last will and testament of Patrick Hayes, deceased, two hundred and sixty-five dollars;
J. A. Sanford, two hundred and fifty dollars; George Allanson, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; Michael Clarey, two hundred and thirty dollars; Helen B. Chapman, nine hundred and forty dollars: Andrew Frederickson, nine hundred and five dollars; J. H. Porter, one thousand one hundred and eighty-five dollars; Gustave Ehrlich, one hundred and thirty-five dollars; Dennis Cushing, three hundred and seventy dollars; John Cushing, five hundred dollars; James Durick, one hundred dollars;
William Cushing, two hundred and ninety dollars; William Geary, two hundred and eighty dollars; Oliver Dempsey, two hundred dollars; Catherine Cavanaugh, 284 three hundred dollars; James Durick, four hundred and twenty dollars;Judgments against United States for damages caused by improvement of Fox and Wisconsin Rivers—Cont’d. John F. Seymour, two hundred dollars; W. M. Sinclair, one hundred dollars; costs on appeal to superior court, one hundred and fourteen dollars and sixty-five cents;
M. Aukland, eighty dollars; Aaron Walker, two hundred dollars; Jane J. Thomas, administratrix of the estate of Thomas J. Thomas, two hundred dollars; August Frobne, one hundred and fifty dollars; W. It. and J. M. Edwards, one hundred dollars; Henry Floyd, one hundred and forty dollars; Martha Hanson, eighty dollars; Robert Edwards, two hundred dollars; F. Chamberlain, fifteen dollars; Cornelius Spoor, thirty dollars and twelve cents; Wesley Horton, twenty-eight dollars and ten cents;
Frederick Bandt, one hundred and forty-five dollars; William Page, one hundred and fifty dollars; August Zulk, one hundred dollars; Anton Rumpier and August Zeltner, thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents; Martin Matz, three hundred dollars; John Karon, one hundred and thirty dollars; Martin Tinde, seventy-five dollars; Julius Liebig, one hundred and sixty dollars; Louis Kranz, seventy-five dollars; Herman Esmer, fifty dollars; August Swanke, two hundred dollars; John Hursley, Fred Radtkin, and Martin Radkie, one hundred dollars;
William Spooner, one hundred dollars; Franz Zuilki,one hundred dollars; Juliana Countryman, two hundred dollars; Joseph Guderski, twenty dollars, Frederick Boick, one hundred and eighty dollars; William Fuchs, seventy-five dollars; John O. Borst, one hundred and seventy-five dollars; S. A. Bake, twenty-five dollars; Ephraim Mueller, two hundred and fifty dollars; August Behm, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; G.H.Behm,sixty-fivedollars; Caroline Fuller, sixty-five dollars;
Ernest Lambrecht, one hundred dollars; John Larson, two hundred and twenty-five dollars; Christian Temple, two hundred and thirty-three dollars; S. Y. Judd, five hundred dollars; Elizabeth Owens, three hundred dollars; Henry Talbe, and Ferdinand Retz, appealed, two hundred and fifty dollars; John Jones, three hundred and fifty dollars; John Michaels, one hundred and twenty-four dollars; I). S. Kissam, four hundred and fifty dollars; Julia Hopp, one hundred dollars; Adam McKittrick, four hundred dollars;
James Lynch, three hundred dollars; Ernest Liebenhauer, three hundred dollars; John B. Wyso, one hundred dollars; William McClelland, fifty dollars; William Zanto, two hundred dollars; Michael Glynn, seventy-five dollars; Hollis Stedman, fifty dollars; J. J. Keen/one hundred dollars; Datis E. Lewis, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; Alonzo D. Payne, two hundred dollars; Francis L. Smith, Erastus H. Payne, and Horace D. Smith, two hundred and sixty dollars; Amos C. Brown and Lucy Brown, one hundred and seventy-five dollars;
William Stewart, one hundred and twenty dollars; Joseph M. Hodgkins and Samuel C. Hal], twenty dollars; John McClelland fifty dollars; Henry Falbe, or Phelps, fifty dollars; Tracy W. Lewis, seventy dollars; C. A. Peck, two hundred dollar’s; E. H. Payne and Sarah E. Bigley, eighty dollars; W. J. Middleton, one hundred and fifty dollars; Vincent S. Sawinski, fifty dollars; John Rude, eighty dollars; Hugh Lynch, fifty dollars; William Gordon, two hundred dollars; Thomas J. Dewey, one hundred and fifty dollars;
Amanda A. Bugh, one hundred and fifty dollars; Henry Basing, one hundred dollars; Ferdinand Marion, one hundred and fifty dollars; N. M. Dodson, one hundred and fifty dollars and ninety cents; George Fitch and D. W. C. Pal meter, seventy-five dollars; Mrs T. W. Marsh, seventy-five dollars; Gustave Raasch, sixty dollars; W. J. Frank, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; Edward Teske and Gustave Teske, one hundred anti seventy-five dollars; De Los Maxon, one hundred dollars; Joseph Melodzck, two hundred and five dollars;
Lea Kennan, nine hundred and twelve dollars; Charles H. Kempley, five hundred and ninety-five dollars and twenty-five cents; Anna Eliza Page and Margaret Jane Page, six hundred dollars; John Roger, three hundred and thirty-eight dollars and fifty cents; Edward McCaffery and Asiel Waldo, two hundred and sixty-three dollars and twenty cents; Abraham Seaman, six hundred and forty-three dollars 285 and fifty-four cents; Samuel Phoenix, three hundred and fourteen dollars Judgments against United States for damages caused by improvement of Fox and Wisconsin Rivers—Cont’d.Senate.and fifty cents;
Harriet B. Cramer, fifty-three dollars and four cents; Isaac Pickering, one hundred and eighteen dollars and sixty-six cents; Jane Pickering, one hundred and seven dollars and twenty-seven cents; F. B. Hawes, four hundred and thirty dollars and thirty-five cents; Lyman R. Slade, one hundred and twenty-six dollars and ninety-nine cents; A. W. Whitson and T. Whitson, two hundred and ninety dollars and seventy cents; Charles Metcalf, finir hundred and six dollars and thirteen cents;
Elizabeth Morris, sixty-five dollars; Margaret Bohrner, Theodore Bohrner, and Frank Bohrner, three hundred and ninety-two dollars and thirty cents; Spencer A. Pease, three hundred and seventy-five dollars; Henry W. Rockafellow, one hundred and forty-eight dollars and sixty cents; John and Richard Mee and F. A. Kendall, two hundred and forty-one dollars and sixty cents; C. C. Mathers, three hundred and thirty-two dollars and twenty-five cents; Eli McNutt, Hiram McNutt, and Angelina Waldo, nine hundred and two dollars and sixty-two cents;
J. H. Merritt, four hundred and thirty-four dollars and twenty-five cents; William Hartwig, fifty dollars; John McNab, three hundred and thirty-four dollars and thirty-five cents; Mary A. Leach, one hundred and fifty dollars and forty cents; Robert Weir, six hundred and twenty-six dollars and seventy cents; Matthew Spain, fifty dollars; Wilhelmina Retz, seventy-five dollars; Andrew Kewitz, one hundred dollars; G. Liebenhauer, two hundred dollars; David Evans, five hundred dollars;
Frederick Hault, two hundred and forty dollars; and a sufficient sum in addition thereto as may be necessary to pay the interest on the judgments and awards as above provided is hereby appropriated. SENATE. To pay Mrs Eliza C. Hendricks, widow of Honorable Thomas A. Widow of Vice-President Thomas A. Hendricks.Payment to.Hendricks, late Vice-President of the United States, eight thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars, being a sum equal to one year’s salary for the unexpired term of his service and the allowances of a member of Congress for mileage and stationery.
To enable the Secretary of the Senate to pay to Mary C. Miller,Widow of Senator John F. Miller.Payment to. widow of Honorable John F. Miller, late a Senator from the State of California, deceased, the amount of compensation as a Senator from March ninth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, to March third, eighteen hundred and eighty-seven inclusive, four thousand nine hundred and thirty-one dollars and fifty cents. For folding documents, two thousand five hundred dollars.Folding.Furniture and repairs.
For furniture and repairs of furniture, one thousand eight hundred dollars. For horses and wagons, one thousand two hundred and fifty-three dollars andHorses and wagons. thirty-five cents. For horses and wagons, fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, eleven dollars and fifty cents. For fuel for heating apparatus, fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-five,Fuel. twenty dollars and seventy-seven cents. For miscellaneous items, seventeen thousand dollars.Miscellaneous items.W.
P. Canaday.Payment for hire of horse and wagon. To pay W. P. Canaday, Sergeant at-Arms of the United States Senate, for hire of horse and wagon for his use from December nineteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, to June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, inclusive, at six hundred dollars per annum, nine hundred and twenty-one dollars and twenty cents. To enable the Secretary of the Senate to pay Charles B. Reade,Charles B. Reade.For preparing Senate Manual. clerk of the Committee on Rules of the Senate, for preparing, under resolutions of the Senate of July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, February twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, and April first, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, three editions of the Senate 286 To enable the Secretary of the Senate to pay to the following persons,Payment to special policemen, Mar. 3-5, 1885.Christopher Phillips.Payment to. namely:
J. C. Witèl, M. Rea, J. T. Johnson, P. P. Finigan, 8. C. Whiles, Jed Gittings, W. J. Johnson, V, B. Sharpe, E. T. Bynum, N. J, Coffin, Alex Green, J. E. Clifford, O. F. Holbrook, R. L. Cooper, G. W. Price, J. H. Davis. J. W. Pettit, J. H. Houston, Asa Gardner, Asa P. Barker, and J. W. Hayward, the sum of nine dollars each, being the amount due them for services rendered as special policemen on the third, fourth, and fifth days of March, eighteen hundred and eighty-five; in all, one hundred and eighty-nine dollars.
To enable the Secretary of the Senate to pay Christopher Phillips for services rendered by him to the Senate, under employment of the Sergeant-at-Arms, from November the tenth to December the first, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, in pursuance of the resolution of the Senate of March the third, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, forty-one dollars. To enable the Secretary of the Senate to pay Beverly Hudnell forBeverly Hartnell.Payment to. services as laborer in the Senate from the fifteenth day of May to the thirty-first of July, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and forty-five dollars.
That, the Secretary of the Senate be, and he is hereby, authorized andWilliam M. Olin.Payment to. directed to pay William M. Olin, the difference between the amount of compensation received by him as an employee of the government and the salary of clerk to the Committee on Indian Affairs from the sixteenth day of December, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, to the twenty-first day of January, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, out of the appropriation for salaries of officers, clerks, messengers, and others, Senate, for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six.
To enable the Secretary of the Senate to pay for clerical and stenographicJoint Commission on the scientific bureaus.Payment of expenses.R. S., 17G5, p. 314.Vol. 18, p. 109. services and other expenses of the Joint Commission to Consider the Organizations of the Signal Service, Geological Survey, Coast and Geodetic Survey, and the Hydrographic Office of the Navy Department, one thousand eight hundred and twenty-eight dollars; the accounts for said services and expenses to be paid on vouchers audited and approved by the chairman of said Joint Commission, and to the persons who have rendered the services, notwithstanding section seventeen hundred and sixty-five of the Revised Statutes, or section three of the act of June twentieth, eighteen hundred and seventy-four, chapter three hundred and twenty-eight.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.House of Representatives.E. B. Wade.Payment to. To pay E. B. Wade the difference between the pay received by him and the salary of reading clerk from May twenty-seven th to June fourteenth, one hundred and five dollars. For allowance to the following contestants and contestées in full of expensesAllowances in contested election cases. incurred by them in contested-election eases: To H.A. Herbert, five hundred and one dollars and seventy-five cents; A.
C. Davidson, two hundred dollars; J. B.Weaver, two thousand dollars; FrankT. Campbell, two thousand dollars; Frank H. Hurd, two thousand dollars; Jacob Romeis, two thousand dollars; Meridith H. Kidd, two thousand dollars; George W. Steele, two thousand dollars: Barclay Henley, J. A. Louttit, Joseph McKenna, William W. Morrow, 0. N. Felton, H. II. Markham, six hundred and fifty dollars; and to the widow of J. C. Holmes, a contestant for the seat from the eighth district of Iowa in the Forty-sixth Congress, one thousand dollars; in all, fourteen thousand three hundred and fifty-one dollars and seventy-five cents.
To reimburse Thomas Bell for expenses incurred to date for assistanceThomas Bell.Payment to. as laborer in the folding-rooms, three hundred and fifty-two dollars. To pay James D. Ryan for services as assistant in seal roomJames D. Ryan.Payment to. from December fourth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, until January twenty-second, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, one hundred and twenty dollars. 287 To pay Charles Holbrook for services as laborer in the press-galleryCharles Holbrook.Payment to. from January first to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, three hundred and sixty dollars.
To pay Maurice Ruddlesden the difference between the pay of aMaurice Ruddlesden.Payment to. laborer, at seven hundred and twenty dollars per annum, and that of a messenger, at the rate of three dollars and sixty cents per day, from January first to June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, two hundred and ninety-one dollars and seventy cents. To pay Frank B. Gorman the difference between his pay as laborerFrank B. Gorman.Payment. to. and that of page, from January thirteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, to June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, inclusive, ninety-seven dollars and fifty cents.
To pay Harry Barton the difference between his pay and that of aHarry Barton.Payment to. clerk in the office of the folding-room from March tenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, to March tenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, six hundred dollars. To pay George Winters and L. B. Cook two hundred dollars each,George Winters.L. B. Cook.Payment to. being the difference between their pay as conductors of the elevator and one thousand two hundred dollars per annum, from July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, four hundred dollars.
To pay W. E. Mallory for services in the document-room from AprilW. E. Mallory.Payment to. first to December seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, four hundred and ninety-three dollar’s and eight cents. To pay to the widow of the late Honorable W. A. Duncan, a member-electWidow of W. A. Duncan.Payment to. to the Forty-ninth Congress, but who died before the time of its organization, six thousand dollars. To pay to the widow of the late Honorable Reuben Ell wood the amountWidow of Reuben Ellwood.Payment to. of salary and allowance for stationery for the unexpired term of his service as a member of the Forty-ninth Congress, eight thousand four hundred and twenty-nine dollars and eighteen cents.
To pay to the widow of the late Honorable Joseph Rankin the amount Widow of Joseph Rankin.Payment to.of salary for the unexpired term of his service, and balance of allowance for stationery, as a member of the Forty-ninth Congress, five thousand five hundred and eighty dollars and seventy-one cents. To pay to the widow of the late Honorable William H. Cole the amountWidow of William H. Cole.Payment to. of salary and allowance for stationery for the unexpired term of his service as a member of the Forty-ninth Congress, three thousand four hundred and fifty-eight dollars.
To reimburse the Sergeant-at-Arms for postage-stamps, sixty-fivePostage, Sergeant-at-Arms. dollars. To pay Charles Carter for cleaning extra room of the House Committee onCharles Carter.Payment to. Appropriations, sixty dollars. To pay to each of the cloak-room men borne on the rolls at the close Cloak-room men.Payment to.of the first session of the Forty-eighth Congress, and not otherwise Provided for, the balance due them for the remaining twenty-four days of the month of July, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, under the resolution of the House of Representatives adopted July seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, two hundred and seventy-nine dollars and thirty cents.
To pay to the family of Charles S. Trentlen, late an employee of theFamily of Charles A. Trentlen.Payment to.Frank H. Isham.W. E. Mallory.Payment to. House, the expenses attending his last illness and funeral, not exceeding two hundred and fifty dollars. To pay to Frank H. Isham and W. E. Mallory, one hundred and eighty dollars each, for three months’ service in the document-room, three hundred and sixty dollars. For allowance to members of the House of Representatives for stationery,Stationery. two hundred and fifty dollars.
For allowances for stationery as follows: To Hon B. T. Frederick,Hon. B.T. Frederick.Hon. John A. Kasson.Allowance for stationery. two hundred and fifty dollars, and Hon John A. Kasson, one hundred and twenty-five dollars, members of the Forty-eighth Congress; in all, three hundred and seventy-five dollars. 288 For materials for folding, being a deficiency on account of the fiscal.Materials for folding. tear eighteen hundred and eighty-five, six hundred and sixty-six dollars and ninety-one cents.
For miscellaneous items, being a deficiency on account of the fiscalMiscellaneous items. year eighteen hundred and eighty-five, two thousand dollars. To pay claims for stenographic work done for the standing and selectStenographic work for Committees. committees of the House during the present session by other than the official stenographers, and which are recommended by the Committee on Accounts, namely, to Reuben Dailey, George O’Doherty, E.D. Easton, John D. O’Connor, Simon McPherson, John G.
McLean, H. M. Clapp, Henry G. Hayes, H. H. Alexander, J. L. Andem, J. O. Clephane, J. J. Linney, A. J. Jones, and George W. L. Buckler, two thousand four hundred and eighty-four dollars, being one thousand five hundred and forty-five dollars and fifty cents for services rendered prior and nine hundred and thirty-eight dollars and fifty cents for services rendered subsequent to the appointment of the official stenographers to Committees; said claims to be audited by the Committee on Accounts, and paid, on their approval, by the Clerk of the House, out of the sum herein appropriated; but no part of this sum shall be paid for services rendered under employment by the official stenographers, and paid for by them.
For payment to John C. Barr for forty-two days’ service as clerk ofJohn C. Barr.Payment to. the special committee investigating certain telephone matters, two hundred and fifty-two dollars. To enable the Clerk of the House of Representatives to pay A. Vangeuder,A. Vangeuder. three hundred dollars, for extra compensation as assistant clerk to the Committee on Invalid Pensions during the present session of Congress. To pay Henry H. Smith for additional services rendered as journalHenry H.
Smith.Payment to. clerk under the resolutions of the House of February twenty-third, eighteen hundred and eighty-two and December twelfth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five and for services rendered as clerk to the Committee on Rules during the present session, five hundred dollars. miscellaneous. For additional amount necessary for engraving and printing a portraitPortrait of Thomas A. Hendricks.Engraving and printing. of the late Vice-President Thomas A. Hendricks, to accompany the eulogies ordered to be printed by the joint resolution approved March thirteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, four hundred and fifty dollars.
For payment of sixty-five printers regularly employed on the CongressionalPrinters on Congressional Record. Record, ninety dollars each, for time unemployed during the present session, five thousand eight hundred and fifty dollars. Sec. 2. That for the payment of a portion of the claims certified to bePayment of certain certified claims, &c. due by the several accounting officers of the Treasury Department under appropriations the balances of which have been exhausted or carried to the surplus fund under Vol. 18, p. 110.Vol. 23. p. 254.the provisions of section five of the act of June twentieth, eighteen hundred and seventy-four, and under appropriations heretofore treated as permanent, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, and which have been certified to Congress under section two of the act of July seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, as fully set forth in House Executive Document Number seventy, Forty-ninth Congress, first session, there is appropriated, as follows:
CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FIRST COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by First Comptroller.State Department. state department. Foreign intercourse: For contingent expenses United StatesContingent expenses, consulates. consulates, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and twenty-seven dollars and thirty-two cents. 289 For loss on bills of exchange, consular and diplomatic service, eighteenLoss on exchange. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, nine hundred and fifty-two dollars and ninety-five cents.
For relief and protection of American seamen, eighteen hundred andRelief of American seamen. eighty-three and prior years, four hundred and fifty-seven dollars and twenty cents. treasury department.Treasury Department. Internal revenue: For drawback on stills exported, as providedInternal Revenue.Drawback on stills exported.Vol, 20, p. 342.Redemption of stamps.Refund of taxes. by act of March first, eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, section ten, one hundred and twenty dollars.
For redemption of stamps, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, two hundred and thirty-five dollars and thirty-seven cents. For refunding taxes illegally collected, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, except the claims numbered forty-six thousand and fifty, forty-seven thousand three hundred and eighty-one, and forty-seven thousand four hundred and thirteen contained in said Executive Document Number Seventy, seventeen thousand one hundred and ninety-seven dollars and thirteen cents; and the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby directed to cause the proper accounting officers of the Treasury to reexamine said excepted claims, and to cause theExcepted claims to be reexamined. said accounting officers to reexamine the same and to certify anew the sums due and to whom due respectively by name as nonresident aliens entitled to refunding of taxes collected prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty three.
For refunding taxes illegally collected under the direct tax laws, priorRefund of direct taxes. to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, four thousand five hundred and eighty-four dollars and ninety-nine cents. For salaries and expenses of collectors of internal revenue, eighteenSalaries, etc., collectors. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, three hundred and eleven dollars and eighty-two cents. For salaries and expenses of agents and subordinate officers of internalSalaries, etc., agents, etc. revenue, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, three hundred and one dollars and seventy-six cents.
For salaries and expenses of supervisors and subordinate officers ofSalaries, etc., supervisors, etc. internal revenue, eighteen hundred and seventy-seven and prior years, seventy dollars. For expenses of assessing and collecting internal revenue, eighteenExpenses collecting internal-revenue. hundred and seventy-five and prior years, seven dollars and fifty cents. For punishment for violation of internal-revenue laws, eighteenPunishing violation of internal-revenue laws. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and sixty-seven dollars and forty-six cents.
Miscellaneous objects: For salaries Office of Third AuditorMiscellaneous.Salaries, Third Auditor’s Office., eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, ninety-one dollars and thirty-four cents. For contingent expenses Treasury Department: Freight, telegrams,Contingent expenses, Treasury Department. and so forth, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, eleven dollars and fifty-nine cents. For expenses of national currency, eighteen hundred and eighty-three National currency.and prior years, two thousand two hundred dollars.
For vaults, safes, and locks for public buildings, eighteen hundredVaults, etc.,public buildings. and eighty-three and prior years, eight dollars and eighty-two cents. For propagation of food-fishes, eighteen hundred and eighty-threePropagation of food-tishea. and prior years, three dollars and ninety cents. For salaries and expenses of National Board of Health, sixty dollars.National Board of Health. For Coast and Geodetic Survey (western division), eighteen hundred andCoast and Geodetic Survey. eighty-three and prior years, eight dollars.
For contingent expenses mints and assay-offices, eighteen hundred and eighty-one,Contingent expenses, mints, etc. seventy-eight dollars. For contingent expenses Territory of Arizona, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andContingent expenses, Arizona. prior years, two hundred and thirty dollars. 290 For court-house and post-office, Utica, New York, eight dollars andUtica, N. Y., public building. fifty cents. For refunding to national banking associations excess of duty, priorNational banking associations, refund of duty. to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, eight hundred and seventy dollars and twenty-nine cents.
For refunding to James E. Slaughter amount paid for wreck of monitorJames E. Slaughter, payment to. Tecumseh, sixty-one dollars and twenty-five cents. navy department.Navy Department. For contingent and miscellaneous expenses Naval Observatory, eighteen Contingent expenses, Naval Observatory.hundred and eighty-three and prior years, four hundred and ninety-nine dollars and eighty cents. interior department.Interior Department. For contingent expenses office of Secretary of the Interior, eighteenContingent expenses. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, two dollars and fourteen cents.
For contingent expenses General Land Office, eighteen hundred andContingent expenses, General Land Office. eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and thirty-four dollars and thirty cents. Public-lands service: For surveying the public lands, eighteenSurveying public and private lands. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-three dollars and forty-two cents. For surveying public and private lands, eighteen hundred and seventy-nine, ninety-eight dollars.
For surveying private land-claims in California, eighteen hundredPrivate land claims, California. and eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and nimety-five dollars and seventy cents. For examinations of the public surveys, eighteen hundred and eighty-two Examination of surveys.and prior years, one hundred and sixty-four dollars and twenty-five cents. For appraisement and sale of abandonedAbandoned military reservations. military reservations, eighteen hundred and eighty-one, four dollars.
For Geological Survey, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years,Geological survey. one hundred and eighty-five dollars and ninety-nine cents. For contingent expenses office of surveyor-general of Colorado, eighteenSurveyor-General, Colorado. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, six cents. For contingent expenses office of surveyor general of Idaho, eighteen hundredSurveyor-General, Idaho. and eighty-three and prior years, three dollars. For contingent expenses of land-officers, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeLand officers, contingent expenses. and prior years, eight hundred and sixty nine dollars and seventy-seven cents.
For salaries and commissions of registers and receivers, eighteen hundred Receivers and registers, salaries and commissions.and eighty-three and prior years, seven hundred and fifty eight dollars and one cent. For reimbursement to receivers of public moneys for excess of deposits,Receivers, reimbursement to. one thousand one hundred and nineteen dollars and eighty-nine cents. For expenses of depositing public moneys, eighteen hundred and eighty-three Depositing public moneys.and prior years, one hundred and thirty-four dollars and eighty-two cents.
For depredations on public timber, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorTimber depredations. years, four hundred and sixty-one dollars and twenty-nine cents. For settlement of claims for swamp lands and swampland indemnity, eighteen hundredSwamp-lands claims. and eighty-three and prior years, eight dollars and fifty-five cents. For five, three, and two per centum fund toFive, three, and two per cent, fund to States. States, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, forty-five thousand nine hundred and seventy-five dollars and forty-six cents. 291 department of justice.Department of Justice.Marshals’ fees.
Fees and expenses of marshals, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, eighteen thousand and eighteen dollars and ninety-nine cents. Fees of district attorneys, United States courts, eighteen hundred andDistrict attorneys’ fees. eighty-three and prior years, one thousand one hundred and sixty-three dollars and thirty-three cents. Fees of clerks, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeClerks’ fees. and prior years, one hundred and seven dollars.
Fees of commissioners, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeCommissioners’ fees. and prior years, two hundred and ninety-seven dollars and thirty-eight cents. Fees of jurors, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeJurors’ fees. and prior years, eighty-seven dollars and seventy cents. Fees of witnesses, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeWitnesses’ fees.Support of prisoners. and prior years, three hundred and eighty-seven dollars and forty-five cents.
Support of prisoners, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, four thousand one hundred and eighty-four dollars and twenty-eight cents. Miscellaneous expenses United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-three Miscellaneous expenses United States courts.and prior years, eight hundred and seventy-six dollars and forty-three cents. Expenses of United States courts, eighteen hundred and seventy-nine and prior years, one thousand six hundred and sixty-six dollars and seventy-three cents.
Expenses of Territorial courts in Utah, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeUtah courts’ expenses. and prior years, one hundred and ninety-five dollars and seventy cents. CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FIRST AUDITOR AND COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS.Claims allowed by First Auditor and Commissioner of Customs.Collections. For collecting revenue from customs, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, fifteen thousand four hundred and seventy-three dollars and eighty-five cents. For debentures or drawbacks, bounties, or allowances, prior to JulyDrawbacks, etc. first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, two hundred and thirty-six dollars and forty-two cents.
For repayment to importers excess of deposits prior to July first,Repayments to importers. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, thirty-nine cents. For expenses of Revenue-Cutter Service, eighteen hundred and eighty-threRevenue-Cutter Service.e and prior years, twenty-nine dollars and ten cents. For life-saving Service, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorLife-saving service. years, seventeen dollars and ninety-five cents. For supplies of light-houses, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andLight-house supplies. prior years, five dollars and thirty-one cents.
For repairs and incidental expenses of light-houses, eighteen hundredLight-house repairs, etc. and eighty-three and prior years, two dollars and fifty-five cents. For expenses of buoyage, eighteen hundredBuoyage. and eighty-three and prior years, one thousand seven hundred and eighty-five dollars and sixty cents. For repairs and preservation of public buildings, eighteen hundredPublic buildings, repairs, etc. and eighty-three and prior years, two hundred and five dollars and twenty-one cents.
For beating apparatus for public buildings, eighteen hundred andHeating apparatus, public buildings. eighty-four, nine hundred and sixty-seven dollars and eighty cents. For heating apparatus for public buildings, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, fifty eight dollars and twenty cents. For furniture and repairs of same for public buildings, eighteenFurniture and repairs. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, nine dollars and fifty-five cents. 292 WAR DEPARTMENT CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SECOND AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Second Auditor and Second Comptroller.Pay of the Army.
For pay, and so forth, of the Army, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, except the claim numbered fifty-two hundred and eleven in said Executive Document number seventy, ninety-seven thousand seven hundred and eighty-five dollars and sixty-two cents. For pa,y of two and three year volunteers, eighteen hundred andPay, volunteers. seventy-one and prior years, one hundred and thirty-seven thousand nine hundred and twenty-two dollars and ninety-eight cents. For bounty to volunteers and their widows and legal heirs, eighteen hundredBounty, volunteers, etc. and seventy one and prior years, two hundred and five thousand one hundred and thirty one dollars and eighty-seven cents.
For bounty under act of July twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and sixty-six,Bounty.Vol. 14, p. 322. eighteen hundred and eighty and prior years, fifteen thousand and eighty-one dollars and eighty-nine cents. For pay of volunteers (Mexican war), eighteen hundred and seventy-one and priorPay, volunteers, Mexican war. years, three hundred and sixty-nine dollars and fifty-two cents. For traveling expenses of First Michigan Cavalry, prior to July first,First Michigan Cavalry, travelling expenses. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, two hundred and six dollars and seventeen cents.
For traveling expenses of California, and Nevada volunteers, prior California and Nevada volunteers, travelling expenses.Recruiting.to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, two hundred and eighty-one dollars and ninety-seven cents. For expenses of recruiting, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one thousand three hundred and five dollars and eighty-nine cents. For Rogue River Indian war, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eightyRogue River Indian war.Contingencies, Army. three, one hundred and ninety-two dollars and fifty-two cents.
For contingencies of the Army, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andContingencies, Adjutant-General’s Department.Medical Department.Ordnance stores and supplies. prior years, five hundred and fifty-five dollars and thirty-nine cents. For contingencies of the Adjutant General’s Department, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, sixteen dollars. For medical and hospital department, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, four hundred and two dollars and sixteen cents.
For ordnance, ordnance stores, and supplies, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, fourteen dollars and seventy cents. For providing for the comfort of sick and discharged soldiers, eighteenSick and discharged soldiers. hundred and seventy-one and prior years, forty-seven dollars and seventy-five cents. For twenty per centum additional compensation, prior to July first,Twenty per cent. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, forty-three dollars and thirty two cents. INTERIOR DEPARTMENT (INDIAN) CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SECOND AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Indian claims allowed by Second Auditor and second Comptroller.
For incidental expenses Indian service in Arizona, eighteen hundredIncidental expenses, Arizona. and eighty-three and prior years, four hundred and fourteen dollars and seventeen cents. For incidental expenses Indian service in California, eighteen hundredCalifornia. and eighty-three and prior years, four hundred and eighteen dollars and thirty-two cents. For incidental expenses Indian service in Colorado, eighteen hundredColorado. and eighty-three and prior years, five hundred and twelve dollars and seventy-eight cents.
For incidental expenses Indian service in Dakota, eighteen hundredDakota. and eighty-three and prior years, seven hundred and ninety-four dollars and six cents. For incidental expenses Indian service in Idaho, eighteen hundredIdaho. 293 and eighty-three and prior years, eight hundred and six dollars and seventy-three cents. -For incidental expenses Indian service in Montana, eighteen hundredMontana. and eighty-three and prior years, five hundred and sixty-eight dollars and twenty-five cents.
For incidental expenses Indian service in Nevada, eighteen hundredNevada. and eighty-three and prior years, nine hundred and seventy dollars and sixty-three cents. For incidental expenses Indian service in New Mexico, eighteen hundredNew Mexico. and eighty-three and prior years, three hundred and thirty-five dollars and eighty-eight cents. For incidental expenses Indian service in Oregon, eighteen hundredOregon. and eighty-three and prior years, one thousand one hundred and fourteen dollars and eighty cents.
For incidental expenses Indian service in Oregon and Washington, eighteen hundredOregon and Washington. and seventy-three and prior years, one hundred and six dollars and twenty-five cents. For incidental expenses Indian service in Utah, eighteen hundred andUtah. eighty-three and prior years, one thousand five hundred and twenty-three dollars and twenty two cents. For incidental expenses Indian service in Washington, eighteen hundredWashington. and eighty-three and prior years, one thousand and eighty-six dollars and forty-two cents.
For incidental expenses Indian service in Wyoming, eighteen hundred andWyoming. eighty-three and prior years, seven hundred and thirty-two dollars and eighty-one cents. For support of Assinaboines in Montana,eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, fifty-twoAssinaboines, Montana. dollars and forty-three cents. For support of Ajiaches of Arizona and New Mexico, eighteen hundredApaches, Arizona and New Mexico. and eighty-three and prior years, three hundred and one dollars and fifty cents.
For support of Arapahocs and Cheyennes of Upper Arkansas River,Arapahoes and Cheyennes, Upper Arkansas River. eighteen hundred and seventy-three and prior years, one dollar and thirty-four cents. For support of Arapahoes, Cheyennes, Apaches, Kiowas, Conianches, Arapahoes,Cheyennes, Apaches, Kiowas, Comanches, and Wichitas.Arickarees, Gros Ventres, and Mandans.Black feet, Bloods and Piegans.and Wichitas, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, five hundred dollars and fifty-one cents.
For support of Arickarees, Gros Ventres, and Mandaus, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, three dollars and eighty cents. For support of Blackfeet, Bloods, and Piegans, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, seventy-five cents. For support of Cheyennes and Arapahoes, eighteen hundred andCheyennes and Arapahoes. eighty-three and prior years, thirty-one dollars and fifty cents. For support of Gros Ventres in Montana, eighteen hundredand eighty-threeGros Ventres, Montana. and prior years, fifty-six dollars and seventy-six cents.
For support of Indians of central superintendency, eighteen hundredCentral superintendeucy. and eighty-three and prior years, thirty-eight dollars and twenty-eight cents. For support of Indians at Fort Peck Agency, eighteen hundred andFort Peck Agency. eighty-three and prior years, eleven dollars and ninety cents. For support of Northern Cheyennes and Arapahoes, eighteen hundredNorthern Cheyennes and Arapahoes. and eighty-three and prior years, one thousand six hundred and sixty-eight dollars and seventy cents.
For support of Navajoes, eighteen bundled and eighty-three and priorNavajoes. years, forty-three dollars and sixty cents. For support of Poncas, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years,Poncas. fifteen dollars and ninety cents. For support-of Pawnees, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andPawnees. prior years, one hundred and thirteen dollars and three cents. For support of Sioux of different, tribes, including SanteeSioux. Sioux of Nebraska, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, three thousand seven hundred and twelve dollars and sixty-five cents. 294 For support of Shoshones and Bannocks, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeShoshones and Bannocks. and prior years, one thousand five hundred and sixty-five dollars and ninety cents.
For support of Shoshones in Wyoming, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeShoshones, Wyoming. and prior years, sixty-six dollars and ninety cents. For support of schools, farines, and so forth, for Apaches, Kiowas,Apaches, Kiowas, and Comanches. and Comanches, eighteen hundred and seventy-three and prior years, two dollars and twenty-five cents. For support of schools not otherwise provided for, eighteen hundredIndian schools. and eighty-three and prior years, twenty-one dollars and thirty-three cents.
For support of confederated bands of Utes, eighteen hundred andUtes. eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and fifty-nine dollars and five cents. For support of Utahs, Tabequaehe band, eighteen hundred andTabeqnaohe hand, Utahs. eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and forty-five dollars and ninety-six cents. For support of Walla-Walla, Cayuse, and Umatilla tribes, eighteenWalla-Wall as, Cayuses,and Umatillas. hundred and eighty-three and prior years two hundred and seven dollars and thirty-five cents.
For appraisal and sale of lands in Nebraska belonging to Omaha,Sale of lands of Omahas, Pawnees, Otoes, and Missouri as, and Sacs and Poxes.Agency buildings. Pawnee, Otoe and Missouris, and the Sacs and Foxes of Missouri tribes of Indians (reimbursable), eighteen hundred and seventy-four and prior years, sixteen dollars and eighty cents. For buildings at agencies and repairs, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, thirty-one dollars and ninety-five cents. For commission to negotiate the removal of the Utes in Colorado,Ute Commission. eighteen hundred and seventy-nine and prior years, one hundred and thirty-eight dollars and eighty-five cents.
For collecting and subsisting roving bands of Kickapoos and otherCollecting roving Kickapoos. Indians on the borders of Texas and Mexico, eighteen hundred and seventy-four and prior years, one dollar and seventy-five cents. For contingencies of the Indian Department, eighteen hundred andContingencies, Indian Department. eighty-three and prior years, one thousand three hundred and sixty-two dollars and fifty-five cents. For expenses of Black Hills Commission in the fiscal year eighteenBlack Hills Commission. hundred and seventy-six, thirty dollars.
For expenses under treaties made by Indian Peace Commission, eighteen hundredIndian Peace Commission. and seventy-three and prior years, one thousand and ninety-five dollars and eighty-three cents. For expenses of Indian Commissioners, eighteen hundred andIndian Commissioners. eighty-three and prior years, three hundred and thirty-four dollars and sixty-five cents. For expenses of Indian delegations visiting Washington, eighteen hundredDelegations visiting Washington. and seventy-five and prior years, one hundred and eleven dollars and one cent.
For insurance, transportation, and delivery of annuities to Pawnees,Annuities to Pawnees, Poncas, and Yankton Sioux.Treaty with Indians in Kansas. Poncas, and Yankton yionx, eighteen hundred and seventy-three and prior years, seventy-two dollars and fifty-six cents. For negotiating treaty with Indians in Kansas, eighteen hundred and seventy-three and prior years, two dollars and eighty-five cents. For pay of Indian agents, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and Indian agents.prior years, eight hundred and seventy-two dollars and twenty-four cents.
For pay of interpreters, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorInterpreters. years, seventy-six dollars and ninety-two cents. For pay and expenses of commissioners to appraise Bound ValleyAppraisal Round Valley Indian Reservation. Indian Reservation, in California, eighteen hundred and seventy-five and prior years, one hundred and twenty-eight dollars and seventy cents. For purchase of wagons, tools, teams, and so forth, forNorthern super-in tendency. northern superintendency, eighteen hundred and seventy-three and prior years, four dollars and eighty-nine cents. 295 For removal and subsistence of Indians in California, pay of physician,Indians in California. smiths, carpenters, and so forth, eighteen hundred and seventy-three and prior years, one hundred and one dollars and twenty cents.
For removal of stray bands of Winnebagoes and Pottawatomies inWinnebagoes and Pottawatomies. Wisconsin, eighteen hundred and seventy-three and prior years, ten dollars and fifty cents. For settlement, subsistence, and support of Shoshones, Bannocks,Shoshones. Bannocks, etc., Idaho and Oregon. and other bauds in Idaho and Southeastern Oregon, eighteen hundred and seventy-eight and prior years, one thousand one hundred and forty-five dollars and twenty-two cents. For survey of the Black Hills in the fiscal year eighteen hundred and Survey of Black Hills.seventy-six, fifteen dollars.
For telegraphing and purchase of Indian supplies, eighteen hundredTelegraphing, etc., supplies. and eighty-three and prior years, two hundred and twenty-nine dollars and ninety-five cents. For transportation of Indian supplies, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeTransportation, supplies. and prior years, one thousand six hundred and twenty-four dollars and eighty-six cents. For traveling expenses of Indian inspectors, eighteen hundred andInspectors, travelling expenses. eighty-three and prior years, four hundred and twenty-seven dollars and seventy-five cents.
CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE THIRD AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Third Auditor and Second Comptroller.Interior Department. interior department. For army pensions, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior Army pensions.years, sixty-two dollars and thirty-six cents. war department.WarDepartment. For contingencies of fortifications, eighteen hundred and sixty-fourFortifications, contingencies. and prior years, two thousand three hundred and thirty-nine dollars and forty two cents.
For surveys for military defenses, eighteen hundred and eighty three Military defenses, surveys.and prior years, twelve dollars. For Signal Service, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorSignal Service. years, four hundred and five dollars and twenty-five cents. For Signal Service, incidental expenses, eighteen hundred and eighty-four,Signal Service, incidental expenses. twelve thousand one hundred and thirty-seven dollars and thirty cents. For Signal Service, incidental expenses, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, six thousand seven hundred and eighty-four dollars and five cents.
For construction, maintenance, and repair of military telegraph lines, eighteen hundredMilitary telegraph lines. and eighty-three and prior years, two hundred and twenty-five dollars. For transportation of officers and their baggage, eighteen hundredTransportation, officers. and seventy-one and prior years, one hundred and fourteen dollars and eighty-seven cents. For keeping, transporting, and supplying prisoners of war, eighteenPrisoners of war. hundred and seventy-one and prior years, twenty-four dollars.
For Rogue River Indian war, prior to July first, eighteen hundredRogue River Indian war. and eighty-three, thirty dollars and forty-two cents. For pay, transportation, services, and supplies of Oregon and Washington Volunteers, Oregon and Washington, pay, etc.volunteers in eighteen hundred and fifty-five and eighteen hundred and fifty-six, eighteen hundred and seventy-one and prior years, three thousand six hundred and thirty-eight dollars and twenty-nine cents. For twenty per centum additional compensation, prior to July first,Twenty per cent. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, eight hundred and fifty dollars and fifty-two cents. 296 For regular supplies Quartermaster’s Department, eighteen hundredQuartermaster’s Department.Regular supplies. and eighty-three and prior years, except the claim numbered thirty four thousand six hundred and fifty-two in said Executive Document dumber Seventy, six thousand three hundred and fifty-eight dollars and eighty-four cents.
For incidental expenses Quartermaster’s Department, eighteen hundredIncidental expenses. and eighty-three and prior years, four thousand one hundred and fifteen dollars and ninety-one cents. For transportation of the Army and its supplies, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeTransportation. and prior years, thirty-nine thousand three hundred and sixty-seven dollars and thirty-five cents. For fifty per centum of arrears of Army transportationArrears of transportation. due certain land-grant railroads,eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior-years, one thousand three hundred and seven dollars and nineteen cents.
For barracks and quarters, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years,Barracks and quarters. fourteen thousand and twelve dollars and eighty-eight cents. For clothing, camp and garrison equipage, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeClothing, camp and garrison equipage.Horses and prior years, fifty-two dollars and seventy-eight cents. For horses for cavalry and artillery, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, except the claim numbered eighty-two thousand four hundred and fifty-five, for one hundred and thirty-five dollars, where it is enumerated the second time under this head in said Executive Document Number Seventy, six thousand seven hundred and ninety-five dollars.
For subsistence of the Army, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andSubsistence of the Army. prior years, four thousand nine hundred and fifty-six dollars and seventy-seven cents. For commutation of rations to prisoners of war in rebel States andCommutation of rations, prisoners of war. soldiers on furlough, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, fourteen thousand six hundred and fifty dollars and twenty-five cents. For horses and other property lost in the military service, prior to JulyHorse, etc., claims. first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, one hundred and sixty-two thousand seven hundred and forty-three dollars and fifty-six cents.
NAVY DEPARTMENT CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FOURTH AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by the Fourth Auditor and Second Comptroller.Navy Department.Pay. For pay of the Navy, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, one hundred and eight thousand six hundred and twenty dollars and one cent. For pay, miscellaneous, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorPay, miscellaneous. years, two thousand seven hundred and fifty-three dollars and four cents. For contingent, Navy, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorContingent. years, three thousand one hundred and sixty-seven dollars and eighteen cents.
For pay, Marine Corps, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three,Pay, Marine Corps. seven hundred and thirty-three dollars and seventy-five cents. For contingent, Marine Corps, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeContingent, Marine Corps.Provisions, Marine Corps.Miscellaneous, Naval Academy.Bureau of Navigation. and prior years, one hundred and fifty-six dollars and sixty-nine cents. For provisions, Marine Corps, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, sixty-six dollars and forty-five cents.
For miscellaneous, Naval Academy,eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, two dollars and thirty-three cents. For contingent, Bureau of Navigation, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, twenty-five dollars and seventy-six cents. 297 For observations transit of Venus, Bureau of Navigation, prior toTransit of Venus. July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, one thousand one hundred and sixty dollars and sixty-three cents. For survey west coast of Mexico, Bureau of Navigation, prior to July Survey west coast Mexico.first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, one hundred and eighty dollars and ninety-eight cents.
For contingent, Bureau of Ordnance, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeBureau of Ordnance. and prior years, twelve dollars and thirty cents. For contingent, Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting, eighteen hundredBureau of Equipment and Recruiting. and eighty-three and prior years, three hundred and three dollars and fifty-nine cents. For maintenance of yards and docks, Bureau of Yards and Docks,Bureau of Yards and Docks. eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, three hundred and eighteen dollars and twenty-nine cents.
For medical department, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, eighteenBureau of Medicine and surgery. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, two hundred and fourteen dollars and fifty-nine cents. For contingent, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and thirty-seven dollars and eighty-six cents. For provisions, Navy, Bureau of Provisions and Clothing, eighteenBureau of Provisions and Clothing. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, sixty dollars and seventy-five cents.
For steam-machinery, Bureau of Steam Engineering, eighteen hundred andBureau of Steam-Engineering. eighty-three and prior years, three thousand nine hundred and thirty-four dollars and seventy-two cents. For bounty for destruction of enemies’ vessels, prior to July first,Bounties. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, three hundred and ninety-four dollars and ninety-eight cents. For enlistment bounties to seamen, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, four thousand eight hundred and seventy-three dollars and twenty-eight cents.
For indemnity for lost clothing, prior to July first, eighteen hundredLost clothing. and eighty-three, one thousand five hundred and seventy-two dollars and filty cents. For the payment of claims for difference between actual expensesDifference between actual expenses and mileage. and mileage allowed under the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of the United States versus Graham, except the claim numbered ninety-seven hundred and sixty-nine, fifty-three thousand seven hundred and fifty-one dollars and sixty-four cents.
CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SIXTH AUDITOR.Claims allowed by Sixth Auditor. post-office department.Post-Office Department. For deficiency in postal revenues, eighteen hundred and eighty-threePostal revenues. and prior years, except the claims numbered sixty-seven hundred and eighty-eight, sixty-seven hundred and eighty-nine, sixty-seven hundred and ninety-nine, sixty-eight hundred, and sixty-eight hundred and two contained in said Executive Document Number Seventy, four thousand eight hundred and sixty-three dollars and thirteen cents.
Sec. 3. That for the payment of a portion of the following supplementalPayment of certain claims, etc., supplemental.Vol. 18, p. 110.Vol. 23, p. 254. list of claims, which are fully set forth in House Executive Document Number Two Hundred and Twenty-five, Forty-ninth Congress, first session, and are certified to be due by the accounting officers of the Treasury under appropriations the balances of which have been exhausted or carried to the surplus fund under the provisions of section five of the act approved June twentieth, eighteen hundred and seventy-four, and under appropriations heretofore treated as permanent, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-three and 298 prior years, and which have been certified to Congress under section two of the act of July seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, there is appropriated as follows:
CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FIRST COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by the First Comptroller.State Department.Contingent expenses, foreign missions. state department. Foreign intercourse: For contingent expenses foreign missions, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, nine hundred and twenty-one dollars and thirty-two cents. For salaries consular service, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andConsular salaries. prior years, one hundred and five dollars and thirty-three cents. For contingent expenses United States consulates, eighteen hundred andContingent expenses, consulates. eighty-three and prior-years, one thousand and eighty-three dollars and eighty-four cents.
For relief and protection of American seamen, eighteen hundred andRelief of American seamen. eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and ten dollars. treasury department.Treasury Department. Internal revenue: For redemption of stamps, prior to July first,Internal-revenue.Redemption of stamps.Refunding taxes.Claims to be reexamined. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, four hundred and seventy-seven dollars and thirty-seven cents. For refunding taxes illegally collected, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, except the claims numbered forty-eight thousand one hundred and ninety-one, forty-eight thousand two hundred and eighty-one, and forty-eight thousand two hundred and eighty-two contained in said Executive Document Number Seventy, two thousand nine hundred and ninety-six dollars and eighty four cents; and the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby directed to cause the proper accounting officers of the Treasury to reexamine said excepted claims, and to cause the said accounting officers to reexamine the same and to certify anew the sums due and to whom due respectively by name as nonresident aliens entitled to refunding of taxes collected prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three.
For refunding taxes illegally collected under the direct-tax laws, priorDirect taxes. to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, nineteen dollars and twenty-nine cents. For punishment for violation of internal-revenue laws, eighteen hundredViolation of internal-revenue taws. and eighty-three and prior-years, seventy-seven dollars and eighty-four cents. For salaries and expenses of agents and subordinate officers of internalAgents, etc., salaries. revenue, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior-years, two hundred and fifty-four dollars and five cents.
Miscellaneous: For bounty to officers and crews of vessels under lawsBounties, suppression of slave-trade. for the suppression of the slave trade, nine hundred and ninety-five dollars and sixty-eight cents. interior department.Interior Department. Public-lands service: For salaries and commissions of registers andPublic lands.Receivers and registers, salaries. receivers, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and forty-one dollars and ninety-two cents.
For expenses of depositing public moneys, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeDepositing public moneys. and prior years, thirteen dollars and fifty cents. For reimbursement to receivers of public moneys for excess of deposits,Reimbursing receivers. two hundred and seventy-one dollars and eighty-nine cents. Miscellaneous: For expenses of the eighth census, one hundred and eighty-nine Eighth census.dollars and sixty-seven cents. 299 For preservation of collections, National Museum, eighteen hundredNational Museum. and eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and forty-nine dollars and sixteen cents. department of justice.Department of Justice.
For fees and expenses of marshals, United States courts, eighteenMarshals’ fees. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, six thousand four hundred and six dollars and forty-five cents. For fees of district attorneys, United States courts, eighteen hundredDistrict attorneys’ lees. and eighty-three and prior years, two thousand and sixty-five dollars. For fees of clerks, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeClerks’ fees. and prior years, eight hundred and fifty-seven dollars and ninety-five cents.
For fees of commissioners, United States courts, eighteen hundred andCommissioners’ fees. eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and eighty-eight dollars and ninety cents. For fees of witnesses, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeWitnesses’ fees. and prior years, two thousand two hundred and fifty-one dollars and seventy-six cents. For support of prisoners, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeSupport of prisoners. and prior years, one thousand four hundred and ninety-four dollars and twenty-five cents.
For miscellaneous expenses United States courts, eighteen hundred andMiscellaneous expenses, United States courts. eighty-three and prior years, seventy-three dollars and fifty cents. CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FIRST AUDITOR AND COMMIS SIGNER OF CUSTOMS.Claims allowed by First Auditor and Commissioner of Customs. For lighting and buoyage of the Mississippi, Missouri, and OhioLighting a n d buoying Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio Rivers.Marine Hospital Service. Rivers, eighteen bundled and eighty-three and prior years, fifteen dollars and twenty-five cents.
For Marine Hospital Service, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, forty-six cents. For expenses of collecting the revenue from customs, prior to JulyCollecting customs. first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, one hundred and thirty-five thousand nine hundred and thirty-six dollars and thirty-nine cents. For furniture and repairs of same for public buildings, eighteen hundredFurniture and repairs. and eighty-three and prior years, ten dollars and eleven cents.
For furniture and repairs of same for public buildings, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and seventy-one dollars and twenty cents. WAR DEPARTMENT CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SECOND AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Second Auditor and Second Comptroller.War Department.Pay of the Army. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, ten thousand six hundred and eighty-eight dollars and ninety-five cents. For pay of two and three year volunteers, eighteen hundred andPay of volunteers. seventy one and prior years, ninety five thousand eight hundred and eighty-five dollars and seventy nine cents.
To pay the claim of Cornelius O’Connell, being amount found due himCornelius O’Connell,Payment to. on settlement numbered fifty-six thousand four hundred and forty-two, fifty-three dollars and thirty-one cents. For bounty to volunteers and their widows and legal heirs, eighteenBounties. hundred and seventy-one and prior years, one hundred and eight thousand one hundred and thirty-seven dollars and thirty-five cents. For bounty under act of July twenty-eighth, eighteen .hundredVol. 14, p. 322. and sixty-six eighteen hundred and eighty and prior years, twenty thousand two hundred and sixty-one dollars and seventy-eight cents. 300 For pay of volunteers (Mexican war), eighteen hundred and seventy-one and prior years, one hundred and ten dollars.
For draft and substitute fund, eighteen hundred and seventy-one andDraft and substitute fund. prior years, twenty dollars and sixty-five cents. For medical and hospital department, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andMedical Department. prior years, fort,y-seven dollars and sixty-six cents. For expenses of recruiting, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorRecruiting. years, live dollars and sixty-eight cents. INTERIOR DEPARTMENT CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SECOND AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Second Auditor and Second Comptroller.Indian Department.Contingencies.
For contingencies of the Indian Department, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, nine dollars and eighty-five cents. For pay of Indian agents, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorIndian agents. years, six hundred and ninety-four dollars and eighty-four cents. For support of Arapahoes, Cheyennes, Apaches, Kiowas, Comanches,Arapahoes, Cheyennes, Apaches, Kiowas, Comanches, and Wichitas.Supplies, telegraphing, etc. and Wichitas, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, two-hundred and seventy-five dollars and forty-one cents.
For telegraphing and purchase of Indian supplies, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, ten dollars and fifty cents. For telegraphing and purchase of Indian supplies, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, thirty-nine dollars and eighty-six cents. For transportation of Indian supplies, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeSupplies, transportation. and prior-years, one hundred and ninety-four dollars and forty-two cents. WAR DEPARTMENT CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE THIRD-AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Third Auditor and Second Comptroller.
For observation and report of storms, eighteen War Department.hundred and eighty-threeReport, etc., of storms. and prior years, five dollars. For Signal Service, incidental expenses, eighteen hundredSignal Service, incidental expenses. and eighty-four, four hundred and seventy-nine dollars and fifteen cents. For Signal Service, incidental expenses, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, two hundred and eighteen dollars and five cents. For construction, maintenance, and repair of military telegraph lines,Military telegraph lines. eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, twenty-eight dollars-and twelve cents.
For refunding to States expenses incurred in raising volunteers,Expenses of States in raising volunteers. twenty-eight thousand five hundred and ten dollars and eighty-eight-cents. For reimbursement to certain States and Territories for expenses incurredExpenses of States and Territories in suppressing hostilities, etc. in repelling invasions and suppressing Indian hostilities, act June twenty-seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-two, eighteen thousand and eighty-one dollars and twenty-three cents.
For transportation of officers and their baggage, eighteen hundred andTransportation. seventy one and prior years, twenty-two dollars and fifty cents. For pay, transportation, services, and supplies of Oregon and Washington Oregon and Washington volunteers, pay, etc.volunteers in eighteen hundred and fifty-five and eighteen hundred and fifty-six, eighteen hundred and seventy-one and prior years, five hundred and eighty-eight dollars and sixty-four cents. For payment to Fourth Regiment Vermont Militia for services at battleFourth Vermont militia, war of 1812.Twenty percent. of Plattsburg, fourteen dollars.
For twenty per centum additional compensation, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, ninety-five dollars and forty-six cents. For regular supplies Quartermaster’s Department,Quartermaster’s Department; regular supplies. eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one thousand, seven hundred and twelve dollars and ninety-three cents. Pay of volunteers, Mexican war. 301 For incidental expenses Quartermaster’s Department, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeIncidental expenses. and prior years, one hundred and eighty-two dollars and forty-one cents.
For transportation of the Army and its supplies, eighteen hundredArmy transportation. and eighty-three and prior years, twelve thousand one hundred and fifty-four dollars and twenty cents. For fifty per centum of arrears of Army transportation due certainArrears of transportation. land grant railroads, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, fifty-live dollars. For barracks and quarters, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years,Barracks and quarters. two thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars;
For clothing and camp and garrison equipage, eighteen hundred and-eighty-threeClothing, camp and garrison equipage.Horses. and prior years, three dollars and seventy-five cents. For horses for cavalry and artillery, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one thousand five hundred and eight dollars and twelve cents. For subsistence of the Army, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andArmy subsistence. prior years, two hundred and thirty-one dollars. For commutation of rations to prisoners of war in rebel States andCommutation of rations, prisoners of war. soldiers on furlough, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, three thousand three hundred and fifty-six dollars and twenty cents.
For horses and other property lost in the military service, prior toHorse, etc., claims. July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, ninety-seven thousand seven hundred and ninety-two dollars and twelve cents. NAVY DEPARTMENT CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FOURTH AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Fourth Auditor a n d Second Comptroller, Navy Department.Navy, pay. For pay of the Navy, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, twenty-six thousand six hundred and eighty dollars and ninety cents.
For pay, miscellaneous, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, three hundred and seventy-six dollars and eighty-six cents. For contingent, Navy, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorContingent. years, two hundred and forty-two dollars and seventy-three cents. For transportation and recruiting, Marine Corps, eighteen hundred andMarine Corps. eighty-five, eleven dollars. For contingent, Marine Corps, eighteen hundred and eighty-five, nine dollars and eighty cents.
For contingent, Bureau of Navigation, eighteen hundred and eighty-five,Bureau of Navigation. thirty-two dollars and seventy-two cents. For contingent, Bureau of Ordnance, eighteen hundred and eighty-five,Bureau of Ordnance. ninety-seven dollars and thirty-five cents. For contingent, Bureau of Ordnance, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, fifteen dollars and nine cents. For transportation and recruiting, Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting,Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting. eighteen hundred and eighty-five, twelve dollars.
For contingent,BureauofEquipmcntandRecruiting,eighteen hundred and eighty-four, ten dollars and forty-seven cents. For contingent, Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, two hundred and thirty-two dollars and seventy-four cents. For provisions, Navy, Bureau of Provisions and Clothing, eighteenBureau of Provisions and Clothing. hundred and eighty-four, one thousand seven hundred and eighty-nine dollars and twenty cents. For contingent, Bureau of Provisions and Clothing, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, eight hundred and eighty-three dollars and forty-two cents.
For bounty for the destruction of enemy’s vessels, prior to JulyBounties. first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, one hundred and twenty dollars and three cents 302 For enlistment bounties to seamen, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty three, three hundred and eighty-four dollars and fifty-three cents. For indemnity for lost clothing, prior to July first, eighteen hundredLost clothing. and eighty-three, five hundred and sixty-six dollars and sixty-six cents. For the payment of claims for difference between actual expensesDifference between actual expenses and mileage. and mileage, allowed under the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of the United States versus Graham, forty-nine thousand four hundred and twenty-six dollars and forty-two cents.
CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SIXTH AUDITOR.Claims allowed by Sixth Auditor. post-office department. For deficiency in postal revenues, eighteen hundred and eighty-threePostal revenues. and prior years, two thousand six hundred and one dollars and twenty cents. Sec. 4. That for the payment of a portion of the claims which arePayment of certain claims, additional. fully set forth in House Executive Document Number Two Hundred and Ten, first session Forty-ninth Congress, and which was transmitted to Congress pursuant to a resolution of the House of Representatives adopted March twenty-fifth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, there is appropriated as follows:
CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FIRST COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by First Comptroller.State Department. department of state. Foreign intercourse: For salaries consular officers not citizens, eighteenSalaries, consular officers not citizens.Salaries of ministers. hundred and eighty-two and prior years, one hundred and fifty dollars. For salaries of ministers, eighteen hundred and eighty-two and prior years, four hundred and forty-five dollars and forty cents. department of the interior.Interior Department.Five, three, and two per cent., to States.
Public-land service: For five, three, and two per centum fund to States, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-two, three thou, sand two hundred and seventy-two dollars and fifty-seven cents. department of justice.Department of Justice. Judicial expenses: For fees and expenses of marshals, United StatesMarshals’ fees. courts, eighteen hundred and eighty one and prior years, six thousand one hundred and nineteen dollars. For fees of witnesses, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-one andWitnesses’ fees. prior years, five hundred and thirty-two dollars and forty-five cents.
CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Second Comptroller.Army transportation. For the payment of the claims on account of transportation of the Army and its supplies certified as due by the Second Comptroller, and fully set forth in the schedule of February twentieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, Appendix A, in said Executive Document Number Two Hundred and ten, two thousand four hundred and one dollars and forty-eight cents. For the payment of the claims on account of transportation of the Army and its supplies certified as due by the Second Comptroller in Schedule A, pages twenty-one and twenty-two, of said Executive Certain claims excepted.Document Number Two Hundred and Ten, except the claims numbered forty-three hundred and seventy-seven, five thousand two hundred and 303 forty-five and thirteen hundred and eight enumerated therein, forty-eight thousand six hundred and fifty-five dollars and eighty-one cents; and the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby directed to cause the proper accounting officers of the Treasury to re examine said excepted claims and also claimExcepted claims to be reexamined. numbered twelve hundred and twelve as certified in said Executive Document, page twenty-two; and if said claims or either of them shall be again certified to Congress the reasons in full for said certification shall be submitted to Congress with a detailed statement of the facts upon which said claims originated.
For the payment of the claims on account of transportation of the Army and its supplies certified as due by the Second Comptroller in supplement to Schedule A, page twenty-three, of said Executive Document Number Two Hundred and Ten, eleven thousand five hundred and seventy dollars and sixty-two cents. For the payment of the claims of officers of the Navy for differenceNavy, difference between actual expenses and mileage. between actual expenses and mileage, allowed under the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of Graham against the United States, as fully set forth on page thirty-three of said Executive Document Number Two Hundred and Ten, and certified by the Second Comptroller to be due, ten thousand six hundred and seventy-three dollars and seventy-nine cents.
Sec. 5. That for the payment of a portion of the following supplementalPayment of claims certified, supplemental.Vol. 18, p. 110.Vol. 23, p. 254. list of claims, which are fully set forth in House Executive Document Number Two Hundred and Ninety-four, Forty-ninth Congress, first session, and are certified to be due by the accounting officers of the Treasury under appropriations the balances of which have been exhausted or carried to the surplus fund under the provisions of section five of the act approved June twentieth, eighteen hundred and seventy-four, and under appropriations heretofore treated as permanent, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, and which have been certified to Congress under section two of the act of July seventh, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, there is appropriated as follows:
CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FIRST COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by First Comptroller.State Department. state department. Foreign intercourse: For salaries of consular officers not citizens,Salaries, consular officers not citizen. eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, three thousand six hundred and thirty-seven dollars and sixty-six cents. For relief and protection of American seamen, eighteen hundred andRelief of American seamen. eighty-three and prior years, two hundred and seventy dollars and ninety-six cents. treasury department.Treasury Department.
Internal revenue: For punishment for violation of internal-revenue laws,Punishing violations internal-revenue laws. eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one dollar and forty-six cents. Miscellaneous objects: For refunding to national banking associationsRefund to National banks excess of duty. excess of duty, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, ninety-seven dollars and eighty-four cents. For bounty to officers and crews of vessels for the suppression of theBounty for suppressing slave trade.Steamboat-Inspection Service. slave trade, two hundred and eighty-six dollars and seven cents.
For contingent expenses Steamboat-Inspection Service, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, thirty-six dollars and three cents. interior department.Interior Department.Public lands.Registers’ and receivers’ salaries, etc. Public-lands service: For salaries and commissions of registers and receivers, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and seventeen dollars and sixty cents. 304 For reimbursement to receivers of public moneys excess of deposits,Reimbursements to receivers. four thousand four hundred and thirty-four dollars and eight cents.
For contingent expenses of land-officers, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeContingent expenses. and prior years, three dollars and eighty-nine cents. For surveying the public lands, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeSurveys. and prior years, three thousand one hundred and forty-nine dollars and ninety cents. For protecting public lands, eighteen hundred and eighty-three andProtecting public lands. prior years, one hundred and thirteen dollars and sixty-four cents. Miscellaneous objects:
For expenses of the eighth census, one hundredEighth Census. and seventy-three dollars and seventy-six cents. department of justice.Department of Justice. For fees and expenses of marshals, United States courts, eighteenMarshals’ fees. hundred and eighty-three and prior years, five dollars and fifty-two cents. For fees of commissioners, United States courts, eighteen hundredCommissioners’ fees. and eighty-three and prior years, two dollars and sixty-five cents. For fees of clerks, United States courts, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeClerks’ fees. and prior years, three hundred and eighteen dollars and twenty-five cents.
CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FIRST AUDITOR AND COMMISSIONER OF CUSTOMS.Claims allowed by First Auditor and Commissioner of Customs.Public buildings, furniture and repairs. For furniture and repairs of same for public buildings, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, seventy-six dollars and twenty cents. For furniture and repairs of same for public buildings, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and twenty-four dollars and twenty-six cents. For salaries of keepers of light-houses, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeKeepers of light-houses. and prior years, fifty dollars.
WAR DEPARTMENT CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SECOND AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Second Auditor and Second Comptroller, War Department.Array, pay. For pay, and so forth, of the Army, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, two thousand and fifty-three dollars and ninety-one cents. For pay of two and three year volunteers, eighteen hundred andVolunteers, pay. seventy-one and prior years, ninety-one thousand and twenty-four dollars and thirty-two cents. For bounty to volunteers and their widows and legal heirs, eighteenBounty. hundred and seventy-one and.prior years, sixty-five thousand nine hundred and sixty-three dollars and fourteen cents.
For bounty, act July twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and sixty six,Vol. 14, p. 322. eighteen hundred and eighty and prior years, fifteen thousand seven hundred and fifty-five dollars and ninety-one cents. For pay of volunteers (Mexican war), eighteen hundred and seventy-oneMexican war volunteers, pay. and prior years, fifty-three dollars and sixty cents. For payment of mounted riflemen under Colonel John C. Fremont in Mounted riflemen, 1846.eighteen hundred and forty-six, eighteen hundred and seventy-one and prior years, eighty-five dollars and twenty cents.
For traveling expenses of First Michigan Cavalry, prior to JulyFirst Michigan Cavalry, traveling expenses. first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three,five hundred and ninety-seven dollars and fifty-four cents. For expenses of recruiting, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorRecruiting. years, ninety-three dollars and fifty cents. 305 For allowance for reduction of wages under the eight hour law, priorRed notion of wages, eight-hour law. to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, ten dollars and seventy-two cents.
WAR DEPARTMENT CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE THIRD AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Third Auditor and Second Comptroller, War Department.Fortifications. For contingencies of fortifications,seventy-one dollars and seventeen cents. For improving Umpqua River, Oregon, one dollar and forty-sevenUmpqua River, Oregon. cents. For observation and report of storms, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeReport, etc., of storms. and prior years, ten dollars. For refunding to States expenses incurred in raisin g volunteers, twelveRefund to States, expenses of raising volunteers.Army, transportation. thousand five hundred and ninety dollars and eight cents.
For transportation of officers and their baggage, eighteen hundred and seventy-one and prior years, forty-nine dollars and fifty cents. For pay, transportation, services, and supplies of Oregon and WashingtonOregon and Washington volunteers, pay, etc. volunteers in eighteen hundred and fifty-five and eighteen hundred and fifty-six, eighteen hundred and seventy-one and prior years, five hundred and twenty-five dollars and sixty cents. For twenty per centum additional compensation, prior to July first,Twenty percent. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, one hundred and thirty-six dollars and fifty-three cents.
For regular supplies Quartermaster’s Department, eighteen hundred Quartermasters’ supplies.and eighty-three and prior years, twenty-one dollars. For incidental expenses Quartermaster’s Department, eighteen hundredQuartermaster’s Department, Incidental expenses. and eighty-three and prior years, four hundred and sixty-six dollars and thirty-five cents. For transportation of the Army and its supplies, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeArmy, transportation. and prior years, fourteen thousand four hundred and eighty-five dollars and sixty-two cents.
For fifty per centum of arrears of Army transportation due certainArrears of transportation. land grant railroads, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, one thousand three hundred and thirty-one dollars and fifty-four cents. For horses for cavalry and artillery, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeHorses. and prior years, three hundred and twenty-one dollars. For subsistence of the Army, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years,Army, subsistence. one hundred and thirty-two dollars and fifty cents.
For commutation of rations to prisoners of war in rebel States and to soldiers onCommutation of rations to prisoners of war, etc. furlough, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, three thousand one hundred and forty dollars. For horses and other property lost in the military service, prior to July first,Horse, etc., claims. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, twenty-six thousand one hundred and fifty-nine dollars and two cents. NAVY DEPARTMENT CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FOURTH AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Fourth Auditor and Second Comptroller, Navy Department.Navy, pay.
For pay of the Navy, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, five thousand nine hundred and sixty-seven dollars and fifty-three cents. For pay, miscellaneous, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, twenty-eightPay, miscellaneous. dollars. For pay, miscellaneous, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, eighty-five dollars and thirty-six cents. For contingent, Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting, eighteen hundred andBureau of Equipment and Recruiting. eighty-three and prior years, fifty-six dollars and seventy-three cents.
For survey west coast of Mexico, Bureau of Navigation, twenty-sevenBureau of Navigation. dollars and five cents. 306 For bounty for the destruction of enemies’ vessels, prior to July first,Bounty. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, one hundred and nineteen dollars and eighty-five cents. For provisions, Navy, Bureau of Provisions and Clothing, eighteenBureau of Provisions and Clothing.Enlistment bounties. hundred and eighty-four, one hundred and nine dollars and eighty cents. For enlistment bounties to seamen, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, three hundred and sixty-six dollars and sixty-nine cents.
For indemnity for lost clothing, prior to July first, eighteen hundredLost clothing. and eighty-three, sixty dollars. For medical department, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, eighteen hundredBureau of Medicine and Surgery. and eighty-three and prior years, one hundred and eleven dollars. For payments on account of clothing or bedding destroyed by order for sanitaryClothing, etc., destroyed for sanitary purposes. purposes in preventing the spread of contagions diseases, one thousand eight hundred and two dollars and fifty-seven cents.
For the payment of claims for difference between actual expenses andDifference between actual expenses and mileage. mileage, allowed under the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of Graham versus United States, twenty-three thousand eight hundred and twenty-eight dollars and thirty cents. CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SIXTH AUDITOR.Claims allowed by Sixth Auditor. To pay Chauncey O. Morse, mail-contractor, for amount of transportationChauncey C. Morse.Mail transportation. from April first to June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-two, route numbered twenty-eight thousand three hundred and thirty-seven, Missouri, twenty-three dollars and twenty-five cents.
Sec. 6. That for the payment of the following supplemental list ofSupplemental claims. claims, which are fully set forth in Senate Executive Document Number Two Hundred and Thirteen, first session Forty-ninth Congress, there is appropriated as follows: CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE THIRD AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.claims allowed by Third Auditor and Second Comptroller.War Department. war department. For horses and other property lost in the military service prior toHorse, etc., claims.-July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, fourteen thousand three hundred and forty-three dollars and twenty-six cents.
Sec. 7. That for the payment of the following supplemental list ofSupplemental claims. claims transmitted to the Senate by the Acting Secretary of the Treasury, July twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, in response to-Senate resolution of July twenty-third, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, being Senate Executive Document Number Two Hundred and Eighteen, there is appropriated as follows: CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE SECOND AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Second Auditor and Second Comptroller.War Department. war department.
For pay of two and three year volunteers, eighteen hundred andPay, volunteers. seventy-one and prior years, fifty-two thousand six hundred and twenty-eight dollars and sixty-one cents. For bounty to volunteers and their widow’s and legal heirs, eighteenBounty, volunteers. hundred and seventy-one and prior years, thirty-eight thousand two-hundred and four dollars and sixty-nine cents. 307 For bounty under act of July twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred andVol. 14, p. 322. sixty-six, eighteen hundred and eighty and prior years, eight thousand eight hundred and forty-six dollars and fifty-nine cents.
For pay, and so forth, of the Army, eighteen hundred and eighty-threePay of the Army. and prior years, one thousand nine hundred and fifty-two dollars and sixty cents. For pay of volunteers (Mexican war), eighteen hundred and seventy-oneMexican war, volunteers, pay. and prior years, two dollars and sixty-four cents. For support of four companies of volunteers mustered at Camp Scott,Support of volunteers, Camp Scott, Utah.Vol. 11, p. 335.First Michigan Cavalry, traveling expenses.Vol. 14. p. 322.Medical Department.
Utah (act of June twelfth, eighteen hundred and fifty-eight,) six dollars and ninety-two cents. For traveling expenses of First Michigan Cavalry, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three (act July twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and sixty-six), two hundred and three dollars and seven cents. For medical and hospital department, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, thirty-six dollars and eighty cents. interior department.Interior Department.Indian agents, pay.
For pay of Indian agents, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, two hundred and sixty-two dollars and fifteen cents. For support of Klamaths and Modocs, eighteen hundred and eighty-threeKlamaths and Modocs. and prior years, two hundred and eighty-one dollars and ninety-seven cents. For traveling expenses of Indian inspectors, eighteen hundred andInspectors, Indian. eighty-five, sixty dollars and fifty-three cents. CLAIMS ALLOWED BY THE FOURTH AUDITOR AND SECOND COMPTROLLER.Claims allowed by Fourth Auditor and Second Comptroller.Navy Department.Pay, Navy. navy department.
For pay of the Navy, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty three, twelve thousand eight hundred and seventy-four dollars and forty cents. For pay miscellaneous, eighteen hundred and eighty-three and priorMiscellaneous. years, twenty-two dollars and ninety-six cents. For contingent, Marine Corps, eighteen hundred and eighty-six,Marine Corps. eighty two dollars and twenty-five cents. For contingent, Bureau of Equipment and Recruiting, eighteen hundredBureau of Equipment and Recruiting.Bounties. and eighty-three and prior years, twelve dollars.
For enlistment bounties to seamen, prior to July first, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, five hundred and ninety dollars and seventy-two cents. For indemnity for lost clothing, prior to July first, eighteen hundredLost clothing. and eighty-three, sixty dollars. For bounty for the destruction of enemy’s vessels, prior to July first,Bounty. eighteen hundred and eighty-three, twenty-two dollars and five cents. For payments on account of clothing or bedding destroyed by order,Clothing destroyed for sanitary purposes. for sanitary purposes, in preventing the spread of contagions diseases, eighteen hundred and eighty-six and prior years, thirteen dollars and ninety-eight cents.
For payment of claims for difference between actual expenses andDifference between actual expenses and mileage. mileage, allowed under the decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of Graham versus United States, six thousand seven hundred and seventy-three dollars and fifty-six cents. Sec. 8. compensation of postmasters readjusted under act of march third,Readjustment of compensation of postmasters.Vol. 22. p. 600. eighteen hundred and eighty-three. For compensation of postmasters readjusted because of the act of March third, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, and to pay the several amounts reported by the Auditor of the Treasury for the Post-Office FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS.
Sess. I. Chs. 903, 928. 1886. 308 Department as due and unpaid, payable from deficiency in the postal revenue for eighteen hundred and eighty-three and prior years, three hundred and eighty thousand two hundred and nine dollars and *Proviso*.Mode of readjusting salaries July 1, 1864, to July 1, 1874, approved.Vol. 13. p. 335.Vol. 22, p. 487.forty-six cents: *Provided*, That the method of reviewing and readjusting the salaries of postmasters and late postmasters of the third, fourth, and fifth classes, under the classification of the act of July first, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, during the period between July first, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, and July first, eighteen hundred and seventy-four, which has been practiced in the Post-Office Department under and since the act of Vol. 10, p. 298.Maxell third, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, entitled “An act authorizing and directing the Postmaster-General to readjust the salaries of certain postmasters in accordance with the provision of section eight of the act of June twelfth, eighteen hundred and sixty-six,” by which all such Readjustments ratified.reviews and readjustments have been made prospectively for the biennial periods provided for in the said act of July first, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, upon the basis of the quarterly returns of postmasters during the preceding biennial periods, respectively, Claims in excess of amount found due. disallowed.whenever the salary actually paid was ten per centum less in amount than such salary should have been if adjusted correctly upon such returns by computing what the commissions upon the same would have been under the act of June twenty-second, eighteen hundred and fifty-four, and averaging the amount thereof annually, as directed by the act of July first, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, for fixing salaries, is approved and ratified as a correct administration of the aforesaid act of March third, Claims to be presented before January 1, 1867.Same method to be pursued.Any different method prohibited.No suit maintainable against receiving officer.eighteen hundred and eighty-three, and of all other acts applicable thereto; and that the several readjustments which have been made are ratified as a correct disposition of the several claims which have been considered and disposed of, and for which this appropriation is made; and the several persons to whom amounts have been respectively found due are declared the rightful persons entitled to the same, and such amounts to be the full sums due upon any and all such claims; and that all claims in excess thereof, and all other claims for readjustment which have been examined and found by the proper officers of the Post-Office Department not entitled to readjustment within such rule of administration, are disallowed and barred.
That no claim for review or readjustment of any such salary shall be hereafter considered unless the same shall be presented to the Post Office Department before the first day of January, eighteen hundred and eighty seven; and that in considering all claims not yet readjusted the same method shall be pursued which is hereby approved; and any and every different method of readjustment of salaries of such postmasters and late postmasters during the period between July first, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, and July first, eighteen hundred and seventy-four, than is herein approved, is hereby prohibited; and no action or suit shall be maintainable in any court against any officer of the United States by Mode of payment.reason of his action in reviewing or refusing to review, or allowing or disallowing, any application for readjustment of any such salary: *And provided further*, That payment of all sums hereby appropriated shall be made by warrants or checks, as provided by the said act of March third, eighteen hundred and eighty-three, payable to the order of and transmitted to the persons entitled respectively thereto.
Approved, August 4, 1886.
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