Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 4.djvu/727

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out of any money not otherwise appropriated, and replaced out of the fund reserved for laying out and making roads under the direction of Congress, by the several acts passed for the admission of the states of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois into the Union, on an equal footing with the original states.

Officer of engineer corps to superintend the road in Indiana and Illinois.
Proviso.
Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That an officer of the corps of engineers, to be selected by the Department of War, shall be charged with the disbursements of the moneys appropriated for the construction of the Cumberland road through the states of Indiana and Illinois; and that said officer shall have, under the direction of the engineer department, a general control over the operations of the said road, and over all persons employed thereon: Provided, That no per centage shall be allowed to such officer for disbursing moneys appropriated for the construction of said road.

Appropriation to carry into effect Pennsylvania act of April 4, 1831; Maryland act of January 23, 1832; and Virginia act of February 7, 1832.
Vol. iv. 553.
Vol. iv. 655.
Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, That for the entire completion of the repairs of the Cumberland road, east of the Ohio river, and other needful improvements on said road, to carry into effect the provisions of an act of the General Assembly of Pennsylvania, entitled “An act for the preservation and repair of the Cumberland road,” passed the fourth day of April, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-one; and of an act of the General Assembly of the state of Maryland, entitled “An act for the preservation and repair of that part of the United States road, within the limits of the state of Maryland,” passed the twenty-third day of January, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-two; also, an act of the General Assembly of Virginia, entitled “An act concerning the Cumberland road,” passed February the seventh, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-two; the sum of three hundred thousand dollars be, and the same is hereby appropriated, to be paid out of any money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of War: the money to be drawn out of the treasury in such sums, and at such times as may be required for the performance of the work.

Road to be surrendered to the states through which it passes.Sec. 4. And be it further enacted, That as soon as the sum by this act appropriated, or so much thereof as is necessary, shall be expended in the repair of said road, agreeably to the provisions of this act, the same shall be surrendered to the states, respectively, through which said road passes: and the United States shall not thereafter be subject to any expense for repairing said road.

Approved, June 24, 1834.

Statute Ⅰ.



June 25, 1834.
Chap. LXXI.—An Act regulating the value of certain foreign silver coins within the United States.[1]

Act of June 28, 1834, ch. 96.
Certain silver coin to pass by tale.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That from and after the passage of this act, the following silver coins shall be of the legal value, and shall pass current as money within the United States, by tale, for the payment of all debts and demands, at the rate of one hundred cents the dollar, that is to say, the dollars of Mexico, Peru, Chili, and Central America, of not less weight than four hundred and fifteen grains each, and those re-stamped in Brazil of the like weight, of not less fineness than ten ounces fifteen pennyweights of pure silver, in the troy pound of twelve ounces of standard silver: and the five franc pieces of France, when of not less fineness than ten ounces and sixteen pennyweights in twelve ounces troy weight of standard silver, and weighing not less than three hundred and eighty-four grains each at the rate of ninety-three cents each.

Assays of such coin to be made at the mint once in every year.Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That it shall be [the] duty of the Secretary of the Treasury to cause assays of the aforesaid silver coins,

  1. See notes of the acts relating to the currency of foreign coins in the United States, vol. ii. p. 374.