Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 11.djvu/261

 1`HIRTY-FOURTH CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 110. *1857. 241 For amount necessary to complete the custom-house at Louisville, Ken- Customyhouses tucky, forty thousand dollars. g;5‘s‘“s‘"u° md For amount necessary to complete the custom—house at Bath, Maine, Eve thousand five hundred dollars. For compensation of two clerks in the Department of State, authorized D Clerks intstato by the act of Congress approved eighteenth August, eighteen hundred and ‘;*;g;’6m;“ pm nfty-six, three thousand one hundred and thirty dollars and forty-three§ 3_ ’’ cents; being from the eighteenth August, eighteen hundred and fifty-six, Ante, p. 139. to the thirtieth June, eighteen hundred and fifty-seven. For Oontingent Expenses of the House of Representatives, viz: For Contingencies folding documents, including folding paper, envelopes, and other folding ;’;sI;$$?v;;_R°p' materials, twenty thousand dollars. For furniture, repairs, and boxes for members, two thousand dollars. For laborers, three thousand dollars. To indemnify the clerk for such sums as he may have expended for books under resolution of the House of Representatives of July seventh, eighteen hundred and fifty-six, and to enable him under said resolution to furnish for each member and delegate of the House of Representatives who has not heretofore received the same the following enumerated books, viz: Gales & Seaton’s Register of Debates, Congressional Globe and Appendix, Public Land Laws, Instructions and Opinions, Elliott’s Debates, Diplomatic Correspondence, Opinions of the Attorneys-General, in tive volumes, Finance Reports, Gales and Seaton’s Annals of Congress, John Adams’ works, J efferson’s works, to be supplied from the numbers of said work now in charge of the librarian, Hickey’s Constitution, and Mayo and Moulton’s Pension and Bounty Land Laws, one hundred and thirty-eight thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, is hereby appropriated out of any money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated: Provided they be furnished at prices not exceeding those for which they were heretofore supplied, and provided also that said books be forwarded by the clerk to such public library in the district of each of said members and delegates as may be designated by said member or delegate. Contingent expenses House of Representatives : For stationary, eight thousand five hundred and fifty dollars. For miscellaneous items, nve thousand dollars. For the purchase one hundred and forty-two copies of the first and tenth volumes of the works of John Adams for the members of the thirty- second Congress, six hundred and thirty-nine dollars. For the reappropriation of five hundred and eighty-Eve dollars heretofore carried to the surplus fund, being the amount appropriated for the engraving of fifty-one thousand five hundred and twenty copies of the mechanical part of the Patent Office Report for eighteen hundred and fifty-one——two. To supply the deficiency in the appropriation for books for members Books of memof the thirty-third Congress, three thousand dollars. gsggsff 33d Com For Capitol police, two hundred dollars. Capitol police. To enable the clerk of the House of Representatives to pay to John C. Rives the additional compensation for the Congressional Globe and G]9b° and AP- Appendix provided in the sixteenth section of the act making appropria- pwd1X' tion for certain civil expenses of the government for the year ending thirtieth June, eighteen hundred and fifty-seven, eleven thousand one hundred and seventy-four dollars and sixty-nine cents. To enable John C. Rives to pay to the reporters of the House the Reportersusual additional compensation for reporting the debates of the present session, eight hundred dollars each, four thousand dollars. For the completion of the printing heretofore ordered by the Senate P'l¤*l¤K· and House of Representatives, and paper for the same, two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. v01.. xi. Pu1s.——31