Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 14.djvu/49

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'1`HIRTY-NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 28. 1866. 19 For taking up and relaying with stone iiagging the brick pavement in P¤vi¤s. 8* front of the War and Navy Departments, on Seventeenth street, three thousand dollars. For stone crossings at the streets intersecting Pennsylvania avenue, five thousand dollars. _ For repairing, re-glazing, re-painting, and putting in thorough order the Pug? €¤‘.i>;1¤d¤, greenhouse at the President’s, five thousand dollars. For repairing roof of the old portion of the Capitol, five thousand four hundred and fifty dollars. To meet the expenditure made by the Commissioner of Public Buildings in illuminating the Capitol and the government portion of the City Hall, two hundred and fifty dollars. For hauling manure for the public grounds, ive hundred dollars. For the protection and improvement of Franklin square, two thousand dollars. For painting the President’s House inside and out, eight thousand dollars; to be expended by the Commissioner of Public Buildings. For rebuilding fence (destroyed by fire) around the Smithsonian Institution, two hundred dollars. For fuel for centre building of Capitol, fifteen hundred dollars. For completing the dome of the Capitol, fifty thousand dollars. Dome of capi- For supplying deficiency in appropriation for lighting the Capitol and W- I’resident’s House and public grounds around them, and around the executive offices and Pennsylvania avenue; Bridge and High streets, Georgetown; F our-and-a-half street, Seventh street, and Twelfth street across the Mall, and Maryland avenue west, and Sixth street south, thirteen thousand dollars. For sweeping and cleaning Pennsylvania avenue prior to the inauguration on the fourth of March, eighteen hundred and sixty-five, one thousand dollars. For carrying the Potomac water into that portion of the President’s House occupied for offices, and all the necessary Hxtures, three thousand dollars. For supplying deficiency in appropriation for fuel for the President’s House and Capitol, six thousand dollars. For continuing the work on the Capitol extension, one hundred and _Capitol extenseventy-five thousand dollars. "°°· For casual repairs of Patent Office Building, ten thousand dollars. For defraying the expenses incident to the death and burial of Abraham Burial o1'Abrap Lincoln, late President of the United States, thirty thousand dollars. ham Li¤°°l¤· For salary of warden of the jail in the District of Columbia, sixteen Jail in District hundred dollars. °‘ C°l¤¤¤l>i¤· For the support and maintenance of the convicts transferred from the S¤Pi><>¤ imd District of Columbia to such place or places as may be selected by the ;Q3$§,€;”°°° °f Secretary of the Interior, thirty thousand dollars. Couectitms of For the preservation of the collections of the exploring and surveying axpimng and expeditions of the government, four thousand dollars. ¤}¥V¢Yi¤8 ¢¤P°· Office of the Secretary of State.--For publication of the laws, eight thou- d‘?§°,§;, of Sw Skllld (lOll2Il'S. {atm-y of State For extra clerk hire, eight thousand dollars. L*“”· For the pay of the United States Commissioner, and for the pay of the Commission United States Surveyor, and for incidental expenses in the execution of “?‘d‘"{ "’fi¥"°' the duty assigned to the joint commission appointed under the first article cyth ;iap¥&089_ of the reciprocity treaty between the United States and Great Britain of the fifth of June, eighteen hundred and fifty-four, from November lirst, eighteen hundred and sixty-five, to March, eighteen hundred and sixty-six, and for drafting and compilation of the final chart, showing the places "reserved from the common liberty of tishing," their limits and descriptions, fifteen hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary.