Laws Passed by the Forty-eighth Congress: Second Session1885 - 230 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 55
Page 7
... authorize or be applied to a new building for the use of the superintendent or other officers of the Academy . For fuel , and for heating and lighting the Academy and school - ships , eight thousand five hundred dollars . For contingent ...
... authorize or be applied to a new building for the use of the superintendent or other officers of the Academy . For fuel , and for heating and lighting the Academy and school - ships , eight thousand five hundred dollars . For contingent ...
Page 17
... authorized and directed to credit the ac- counts of the ex - Commissioners of the District of Columbia accruing since eighteen hundred and seventy - eight with all such disbursements and expenditures , made in good faith , heretofore ...
... authorized and directed to credit the ac- counts of the ex - Commissioners of the District of Columbia accruing since eighteen hundred and seventy - eight with all such disbursements and expenditures , made in good faith , heretofore ...
Page 19
... authorized by appropriations , shall be paid out of the sums appropriated for the work , and for the time actually engaged thereon ; and the Commissioners of the District , in their annual report to Congress , shall report the number of ...
... authorized by appropriations , shall be paid out of the sums appropriated for the work , and for the time actually engaged thereon ; and the Commissioners of the District , in their annual report to Congress , shall report the number of ...
Page 21
... authorized to close the accounts of the Reform School for the fiscal years eighteen hundred and eighty - three and eighteen hundred and eighty - four , if the same can be done without the payment of any money from the Treasury ; and ...
... authorized to close the accounts of the Reform School for the fiscal years eighteen hundred and eighty - three and eighteen hundred and eighty - four , if the same can be done without the payment of any money from the Treasury ; and ...
Page 22
... authorized to make any con- tract for gas or any other illuminating material , in accordance with the provisions of this paragraph , for any longer period than one year . FOR METROPOLITAN POLICE . For one major and superintendent , two ...
... authorized to make any con- tract for gas or any other illuminating material , in accordance with the provisions of this paragraph , for any longer period than one year . FOR METROPOLITAN POLICE . For one major and superintendent , two ...
Common terms and phrases
appropriated article of treaty assistant messenger centum chief clerk class four class three clerks of class contingent expenses Deficiency District of Columbia dollars and fifty dred dollars eight hundred dollars eighteen hundred eighty dollars eighty-two and prior ending June thirtieth fifty cents fifty dollars fifty thousand dollars fiscal year eighteen five hundred dollars five thousand dollars Fort Myer forty four hundred dollars four thousand dollars furniture hereby hundred and eighty hundred and eighty-five hundred and eighty-four hundred and eighty-three hundred and eighty-two hundred and fifty hundred and twenty incidental expenses laborers lars naval nine hundred post-office Provided purchase repairs salaries sand dollars Secretary seventy-five six hundred dollars sixty stationery superintendent thou thousand dol thousand eight hundred thousand five hundred thousand four hundred thousand one hundred thousand seven hundred thousand six hundred thousand three hundred thousand two hundred three hundred dollars three thousand dollars Treasury Department twenty dollars United watchmen
Popular passages
Page 77 - An Act making appropriations for the service of the Post Office Department for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, and for other purposes", approved March 3, 1885 (USC, title 39, sec.
Page 49 - An act making appropriations for the payment of invalid and other pensions of the United States for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eightytwo, and for deficiencies, and for other purposes," approved February twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and eighty-one, is hereby revived and continued in force.
Page 51 - AN ACT making appropriations for the current and contingent expenses of the Indian Department, and for fulfilling treaty stipulations with various Indian tribes, for the year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, and for other purposes.
Page 109 - ... dollars ; two clerks of class four ; two clerks of class three ; one clerk of class two; one clerk of class one; one clerk, at one thousand dollars; one...
Page 187 - ... for detecting and bringing to trial and punishment persons guilty of violating the internal revenue laws, or conniving at the same, in cases where such expenses are not otherwise provided for by law.
Page 193 - Reproducing plats of surveys: To enable the Commissioner of the General Land Office to continue to reproduce worn and defaced official plats of surveys...
Page 46 - Army depots, and from those depots to the troops in the field; of horse equipments and of subsistence stores from the places of purchase and from the places of delivery, under contract, to such places as the circumstances of the...
Page 38 - For expenses which may be incurred in the acknowledgment of the services of masters and crews of foreign vessels in rescuing American seamen or citizens from shipwreck, four thousand five hundred dollars.
Page 198 - Mansion, six thousand dollars. For ordinary care of greenhouses and nursery, two thousand dollars. For ordinary care of Lafayette Square, one thousand dollars. For ordinary care of Franklin Square, one thousand dollars. For care and improvement of reservation numbered three (Monument Grounds), one thousand five hundred dollars.
Page 133 - June 30, 1886, and for other purposes," approved March 3, 1885, a board, to consist of the officers and civilians hereinafter named, is appointed to "examine and report at what ports fortifications or other defenses are most urgently required, the character and kind of defenses best adapted for each, with reference to armament," and "the utilization of torpedoes, mines, or other defensive appliances: