Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 9.djvu/569

This page needs to be proofread.

THIRTY—FIR.ST CONGRESS. Sus . I. Ch. 90. 1850. 543 cers of the treasury, or other pay oliioers of the United States, shall two officers at in no case allow any pay to one individual the salaries of two different in ¤¤m° umaollices on account of having performed the duties thereof at the same time. But this prohibition shall not extend to the superintendents of the executive buildings. For the payment to Corporal Charles Hawke, as ascertained to be CharlesHawke. due him by the fourth auditor of the treasury, one hundred and seventy-six dollars and thirty-eight cents. To enable the Secretary of the Interior to take a perpetual lease to _ Lease or rooms the United States from the city of Utica, New York, free of taxes or {@,,C;*Y Hall °* other charges of any sort, so many rooms in the City Hall, in said` city, ° ' about to be erected, as may be necessary for the proper accommodation of the United States District and Circuit Courts, holden in said city, and their officers, twelve thousand dollars: Provided, That no part of this Proviso. appropriation shall be paid until it shall be certified by the justices of said Circuit Court that the said rooms are provided, and the said lease made. For making alterations in the office of the assistant treasurer of the _OtHce of as- United States at New York, and for furniture for the said office, four §‘;';“§gi““€’• hundred and fifty-five dollars. ' For making alterations in the approaches of the building belonging Alteration of to the United States, in the city of Detroit, now occupied by the courts bl';?';? é’°°§ of the United States and their omcers, under order of the common Ecu", yin 'DBI council of Detroit, and for repairing and renovating said building, five mithundred and thirty-tive dollars. To_pay the amount of subscription under the joint resolution of the Subscription to third March, eighteen hundred and forty-nine, for one thousand copies gis °·¤¤'·‘l** °f of the annals of Congress to the end of the fourth Congress, and to °°gr°”' include the first Congress, as well as the second, third, and fourth Congress, thirty thousand dollars. For continuing the publication of the works of the Exploring Expe- publishing the dition, including the printing of the charts, the pay of the scientific u10d5S of5h6E5- corps, salary of the horticulturist, and care of the collections, twenty- i’,,‘f;“g ’“P° ` five thousand dollars. To defray the expenses incurred u_nder the authority of the commit- Funeral or tee of arrangement for the funeral of General Zachary Taylor, deceased, f;°S*d°'** T°Y‘ late President of the United States, eight thousand one hundred and ' forty-six dollars and seventy-three cents, to be disbursed by the marshal of the District of Columbia. To defray the expenses of transporting the remains of General Transporting Taylor from the cemetery in Washington to Kentucky, to be expended ’°'-1**,*i,S of GQ: under the direction of the President of the United States, four thou- §:,,,,,,,i,§?r sand dollars. To enable the War Department to make such examinations and sur- _ Examination veys as may be necessary to determine upon the best and most availa- gigthieifgregygsga ble mode of supplying the city of Washington with pure water, and to ,,,;,5,,,, with 1,,,,.,, prepare a plan and estimate of the probable cost of the same, to be waterreported to Congress at its next session, five hundred dollars. Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That from and after the pas- Laborers on the sage of this act, the compensation of the laborers on the public grounds, p“°1‘° g’°““d" under the public gardner, in Washington city, shall be forty dollars per month, to be paid monthly, without reduction for time lost in conscquence of sickness. And the compensation of the watchmen, in the various departments Watchmen in of government, shall be Eve hundred dollars per annum. thems d°P°'°‘ Sec. 3. And be itjirrtlm- enacted, That the accounting officers of mA,,,,;,,,,,, crm_ the treasury are hereby authorized, in settling the accounts of Captain M- clark- M. M. Clark, superintendent in erecting barracks and quarters at Savannah, Georgia, to allow him credit for whatever amount was properly