Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 10.djvu/603

 THIRTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 268. 1854. 583 State of California, in the suppression of Indian hostilities within the expended to sup said State, prior to the first of January, Anno Domini eighteen hundred g‘if;g“d‘““ h°" and fifty-four, and that the amount of such expenses, when so ascertained, ° be paid into the treasury of said State : Provided, That the sum so paid shall not exceed in amount the sum of nine hundred and twenty-four thousand two hundred and fifty-nine dollars and sixty-five cents; which amount is hereby appropriated out of any moneys in the treasury not otherwise appropriated. Approved, August 5, 1854. Cunr. CCLXVIII.-An Act making Appropriatz`0:zs_fbr the Naval Service/br the year A¤z!.¤Sl¤ 5, 185·i· ending t/w thirtielh of Junc, one l/tcusand, eight hundred andjijlyjivc. —"""""" Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the following sums be, and they are hereby, appropriated, to be paid out of any money in the ApI>¤‘<>I>fl¤¤i<>¤¤- treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the year ending the thirtieth of June, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-ive; For pay of commission, warrant, and petty oiliecrs, and S08H1C1I, in— oluding the engineer corps of the navy, three million three hundred and sixty-seven thousand six hundred and forty-eight dollars; For pay of superintendents, naval constructors, and all the civil establishments at the several navy yards and stations, one hundred and fifteen thousand three hundred and fifty dollars; That at the navy yard at San Francisco, the pay of the commander shall be three thousand five hundred dollars per annum. One civil engineer, four thousand dollars per annum, and the pay of the navy agent, who shall discharge the duties of both purser and navy agent, shall be four thousand dollars per annum ; For provisions for commission, warrant, and petty oilieers, and seamen, including engineers and marines attached to vessels for sea service, six hundred and eighty-six thousand two hundred dollars ; For surgeon’s necessaries and appliances for the sick and hurt of the navy, including the marine corps, thirty-five thousand five hundred and seventy-five dollars ; For repair of vessels in ordinary, and for wear and tear of vessels in commission, including fuel and purchase of 'henip, two million five hundred and thirty-four thousand nine hundred and fifty dollars ; For ordnance and ordnance stores and small arms, including incidental expenses, two hundred thousand dollars ; For preparing for publication the American Nautical Almanac, N¤¤¤i¢¤l A1- twenty thousand eight liunclred and eighty dollars: Provided, That any "‘”“"°‘ naval officer who may be charged with the preparation, superintendence or publication of the Nautical Almanac, shall receive no compensation for such duty beyond what he would receive while on duty at sea; For the purchase of nautical instruments required for the use of the navy, for repairs of the same, and also of astronomical instruments, and for the purchase of nautical books, maps, and charts, and for backing and binding the same, twenty-t1iree thousand dollars ; For printing and publishing sailing directions, hydrographical surveys, and astronomical observations, five thousand five hundred dollars; For models, drawing and copying, postage, freight. and transportation, and for working lithographic press, including chemicals; for keeping h_ grounds in order; for fuel and lights, for repairs of buildings, and for mFgg§g"°p l` all other contingent expenses of the hydrograplnieal ofiiee, and United States observatory, six thousand one hundred dollars ; Observatory. For continuing the publication of the series of wind and current wind md cur. charts, and for dcfraying all the expenses connected therewith, ten PGM <>h¤¤`l¤· thousand dollars ;