Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 1.djvu/743

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of disease at the seat of government.

removal of any or all the public offices to such other place or places as, in his discretion, shall be deemed most safe and convenient for conducting the public business.

Sec. 7.Supreme court may in such case be adjourned to a different place. And be it further enacted, That whenever, in the opinion of the chief justice, or in the case of his death, or inability, of the senior associate justice of the supreme court of the United States, a contagious sickness shall render it hazardous to hold the next stated session of the said court at the seat of government, it shall be lawful for the chief or such associate justice, to issue his order to the marshal of the district within which the supreme court is by law to be holden, directing him to adjourn the said session of the said court to such other place within the same, or an adjoining district, as he may deem convenient; and the said marshal shall thereupon adjourn the said court, by making publication thereof in one or more public papers printed at the place by law appointed for holding the same, from the time he shall receive such order, until the time by law prescribed for commencing the said session. Also the district and circuit courts. And the district judges shall, respectively, under the same circumstances, have the same power, by the same means, to direct adjournments of the district and circuit courts within their several districts, to some convenient place within the same respectively.

Sec. 8.Repeal of the Act of May 27, 1796, ch. 31. And be it further enacted, That the act, intituled “An act relative to quarantine,” passed in the first session of the fourth Congress of the United States, shall be, and the same is hereby repealed.

Approved, February 25, 1799.

Statute Ⅲ.



Feb. 25, 1799.
[Obsolete.]

Chap. ⅩⅢ.An Act for the augmentation of the Navy.

Section 1.Six ships of not less than 74 guns, and six sloops of war of 18 guns to be procured &c. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That under the orders of the President of the United States, and in addition to the naval armament already authorized by law, there shall be built within the United States, six ships of war, of a size to carry, and which shall be armed with not less than seventy-four guns each; and there shall be built or purchased within the United States, six sloops of war, of a size to carry, and which shall be armed with eighteen guns each, or not exceeding that force; all which ships and vessels shall be procured, manned and employed as soon as may be, for the service of the United States:One million of dollars appropriated. And in part of the necessary expenditures to be incurred herein, a sum not exceeding one million of dollars, shall be, and is hereby appropriated, and shall be paid out of any monies which shall be in the treasury of the United States, not otherwise appropriated.

Sec. 2.The President may augment the force of the other vessels. And be it further enacted, That the President of the United States, shall be, and he is hereby authorized to augment, at his discretion, the force of any ship or vessel, now in the service, or building for the service of the United States, by allowing an additional number of guns and men therein, beyond the established rate, and according to the respective size and capacity of such ship or vessel:$35,000 appropriated. And a sum not exceeding thirty-five thousand dollars, shall be, and is hereby appropriated to defray the expense of such augmentation, and shall be paid out of any monies which shall be in the treasury of the United States, not otherwise appropriated.

Sec. 3.Revenue cutters whose force has been increased may be placed on the naval establishment.
Ante, p. 533.
And be it further enacted, That the President of the United States shall be, and is hereby authorized to place on the naval establishment, and employ accordingly, all or any of the vessels, which, as revenue cutters, have been increased in force, and employed in the defence of the sea-coast, pursuant to the act, intituled “An act providing a naval armament;” and thereupon, the officers and crews of such vessels, may be allowed, at the discretion of the President of the United States, the pay, subsistence, advantages and compensations, proportionably to the