Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 13.djvu/66

 38 THIRTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 45. 1864. ment of claims, signed at Quito, on the twenty-fifth day of November, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, the commissioner to be appointed by the President of the United States, by and with the advice and consent of the Scnutc, shall be allowed a compensation, in full For his services, of three thousand dollars, and ten dollars a day in commutation of travelling expenses for the time actually and necessarily occupied in going from the place of his residence to Guayaquil and returning to his home afvcr the termination of his duties. Pnyyirminis- Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That if the President shall elect to :1; appoint the minister resident of the United Statcs in Ecuador to perform mum lgmmis. the duties of commissioner under the convention aforesaid, said minister ¤i°**¤'· shall receive a. compensation for his services of fifty per ccntum of the 1856, ch. 121. sum hcrcinbefore mentioned, pursuant to the provisions of the ninth sec- 990 I _ 56 tion of the act of August eighteenth, eighteen hundred and fifty-six,•*w °` M' p'regulate the diplomatic and consular systems of the United States." SEO. 3. And be it further enacted, That the President bc, and hereby Contingent ex- is, authorized to make such provision for the contingent expenses of the °h°“° commission under the sziid convention, including the moiety of the United States for the compensation of the umpire, and of the secretary who may bc chosen by the commissioners, pursuant to the provisions of the couvention, as he shall deem just and proper. Sec. 4. And be it further enacted, That such sums of money as may Appmpriatiou. be necessary to carry out the provisions of this act bc, and they are hereby, ap%r0priated out of any money in the treasury not otherwise approprnate . APPROVED, March 28, 1864. ipdl 1, 1864. Cmnr. XLT;'} L-hlira  m¢: Ig£ng App;;2;?»;g;;ons%¢;r theilggfggt QQ tile Zlgitary Academy o e en mg une nr, my teen an mtg- vg. Be it enacted by the Senate and Muse of Representatives o the ;":g;3 é§fd°‘ United States of America in Congress assembled, That the follclllving gum sums be, and the same are hereby, appropriated, out of any money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the support of the military agaslengxy for the year ending the thirticth of J unc, eighteen hundred and sxx y- vc:- For pay of officers, instructors, cadets, and musicians, one hundred and seventeen thousand one hundred and seventy-six dollars. Fgritommutation of subsistence, four thousand one hundred and sixty- cnc dollars. For pay in lieu of clothing to officers’ servants, sixty dollars. For current and ordinary expenses, as follows: repairs and improvemcnbsz fuel und apparatus, forage, postage, telegrams, stationery, transportatxon, printing, clerks, miscellaneous and incidental expenses, and ggmutments of instruction, forty-one thousand two hundred and eighty s. For gradual increase and expense of library, one thousand dollars. For expenses of the board of visitors, four thousand dollams. For forage for artillery and cavalry horses, eight thousand six hundred and forty dollars. £ ¢: ; Supplying horses for artillery and cavalry exercise, one thousand Islor repairs of oHiccrs’ quarters, one thousand five hundred dollars. I or targets and buttcrles For artillery exercise, one hundred dullari For fu rmturc for hospital For cadets, including fixed wash—tubs, hot and cold water bath apparatus a.nd water-closets, one thousand dollars. gor annuul repairs of gas-pnpas and retorts, three hundred dollars. or warming apparatus for barracks, fifteen thousand dollars. For rebuxlding public wharf and opening approach to the same from the south, sxx thousand dollars.