Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 31.djvu/385

 FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 786. 1900. 333 cause the same to be noted on the records of his o&ice, and thereafter the ground described shall be reserved from sale or other disposition, unless for good cause the court shall vacate the order of reservation or Congress shall otherwise direct, and the sentence of imprisonment in any criminal case shall be carried out by confinement .1n the penitentiary or jails herein ·provided for, or as provided in section fty- ,0% S·· M- 554*% P- five hundred and forty-six of the Revised Statutes of the United States. { ` VVhere a suitable court room is not available or can not be obtained c0$1§t¤%{,y(§;i°’; gf at reasonable rental at the place or any of the places where terms- of thvrized. g the court are held, the court may enter a like order of reservation and direct the construction of a suitable building where the sessions of the court may be held, the cost of such building not to exceed in any case -—1i¤¤it. the sum of five thousand dollars, the same to be paid_ and proceedings to reserve the land to be as in the case of the reservation of ground and construction of jail, as hereinbefore provided: Provided, No court _{;mz;i¤¤- building or jail shall be constructed in any division of the district biuiiii¤gsimmb°r °f without authority from the Attorney-General, to whom the clerk shall - furnish a verified account in detailof all expenditures made b him for buildings, repairs, or other purposes, together with his autliiority for each payment made. V Sec. 32. For each certihcate issued to a member of the bar, author- s,;}u**gg;°Y8’ ¤dm*¤ izinf him to practice law in the district, a fee of ten dollars shall he‘ pai to the c erk of the court, which shall be by him promptly remitted to the secretary of the district, and at theisame time the clerk shall advise the governor of such remittance. For each commission ,N<>¢?ri¢¤’ commisissued to a notary public a fee of ten dollars shall be paid to the secre-· 1°li° °°s' ‘ tary of the district. The fees received by the secretary under this section and under chapter seventy-four of title two shall be by him Postr-447. retained and ke t in a fund to be known as the district historical · library fund. The fund thus collected shall be disbursed on the order- i—p¤é¤1<§S£¤¤;<1 {<>f_<1isof the governor for the purpose of establishing and maintaining the ¤§{°mm.1$?2tc,’br”` district historical library and museum. The same shall embrace copies of all laws relatiu to the district, and all papers and periodicals pub— lished within the district, and such other matter of historical interest as the governor may consider valuable and appropriate for such collection. The collection. shall also embrace suc curiosrelating to the aborigines and the settlers as may be by the governor deemed of his- Aé torical importance. The collection thus ma e shall be described by the overnor in the annual re ort of the governor to the Secretary of the Interior, and shall be by liim kept in a secure place and turned over to his uccessor in office. The secretar of the district and the overnor shall each annually account to the Secretarg of the Interior Ior all receipts and disbursements in connection wit such historical libgary and rppzgusgurp. lhb d d d fD d d Ec. 33. e is oricarary an museum rovi e or in section E - ***6. i°P°§· thirty-two of this title is hereby made a designgted depository of pub- iilhydldiiligiilcgigm I lications of the Government, and shall be supplied with one copy of each of said publications in the same manner as such publications are supplied to other depositories. TITLE Il. CHAPTER ONE. or THE Forms or ACTION. ‘Sec. ‘ Sec.. 1. Only one form of action. j 2. Parties thereto, how designated. Sec. 1. The distinction between actions at law and suits in equity, acggy °¤° Mm 0* and the forms of all such actions and suits, are abolished, and there `