Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 2.djvu/305

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Specific appropriations.ing to the usage thereof, to require payment in specie, four thousand dollars.

For furniture for the President’s house, being the balance of a former appropriation, carried to the credit of the surplus fund, one hundred and forty-five dollars and seventeen cents.

For expenses of intercourse with foreign nations, including the compensation of the consuls at the several Barbary powers, forty-six thousand five hundred and fifty dollars.

For the other expenses of the intercourse between the United States and Algiers, and other Barbary powers, one hundred thousand dollars.

For carrying into effect the treaty between the United States and the king of Spain, the balance of former appropriations having been carried to the credit of the surplus fund, thirty-two thousand seven hundred and forty-seven dollars and thirty-six cents.

For the relief and protection of distressed American seamen, ten thousand dollars.

For salaries of the agents in Paris and Madrid, for prosecuting claims in relation to captures, three thousand three hundred and fifty dollars.

For satisfying a balance due to John Habersham, late agent for supplying the troops in Georgia, nine thousand and fifty-five dollars and seventeen cents.

For the relief of sick or disabled American seamen at New Orleans, in addition to the appropriations heretofore made for that purpose, one thousand dollars.

For discharging such sums as may, on settlement of their accounts, by the accounting officers of the treasury, be found due to persons whose property was taken for the use of the militia employed on the expedition to suppress the former insurrection in the western counties of Pennsylvania, one thousand dollars.

Out of what fund payable.
1790, ch. 34.
Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That the several appropriations herein before made, shall be paid and discharged out of the fund of six hundred thousand dollars, reserved by the act making provision for the debt of the United States, and out of any monies in the treasury, not otherwise appropriated.

Sum found due to Thomas Johnson to be paid to him, and out of what fund.Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, That the sum which shall be found due on a settlement of the accounts of the militia who served on an expedition commanded by Major Thomas Johnson, against the Indians, in the year one thousand seven hundred and ninety-four, be paid out of any monies in the treasury, not otherwise appropriated; the appropriation made by the act of the thirteenth of May, one thousand eight hundred, having been carried to the credit of the surplus fund.

Approved, March 14, 1804.

Statute Ⅰ.



March 16, 1804.
Chap. XXII.—An Act declaring the assent of Congress to an act of the General Assembly of Virginia, therein mentioned.

Assent of Congress to act of Virginia for improving the navigation of James river.Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the assent of Congress is hereby given and declared to an act of the general assembly of Virginia, intituled “An act for improving the navigation of James river,” which act was passed on the twenty-third day of January, in the year one thousand eight hundred and four.

Approved, March 16, 1804.