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[Par. 1.] The following prices may be paid for folding books, pamphlets, Prices to be paid speeches, and the Daily Record, namely: For quarto volumes not ex. Daily Record, &c., for folding books, ceeding one cent per volume; for octavo volumes, not exceeding one-half for Congress.' cent each per volume; for the Daily Record, not exceeding two dollars 1880, June 15, ch. per thousand; and for speeches not exceeding one dollar per thousand.

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[Par. 2.] So much of the Joint Resolution approved July fifteenth, eighteen hundred and seventy, as authorizes the employment of additional police force is hereby repealed to take effect from and after the thirtieth day of June eighteen hundred and seventy-six.(1)

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225, par. 1.

Additional police force at Capitol not to be employed. R. S., § 1826.

Public Printer

[Par. 3.] The term "Public Printer" as employed in that part of the act making appropriations for sundry civil expenses of the Government successor to Confor the current fiscal year which repeals all laws providing for the elec- gressional Printer. tion or appointment of Public Printer shall be construed as embracing that officer whether known as Congressional Printer or Public Printer. 23, ch. 455, 0 1, par. 1. 1876, July [Par. 4.] The Architect of the Capitol shall have the care and superintendence of the Capitol including, lighting, and shall submit through the Secretary of the Interior, estimates thereof:

R. S., § 3758. 1874, June 20, ch. 328, par. 4. June 31, ch. 246, par. 1. Architect of Capito; additional

duties transferred to him.

R. S., §§ 1797,

And provided further, That all the duties relative to the Capitol building heretofore performed by the Commissioner of public buildings and 1816, 1817. grounds, shall hereafter be performed by the Architect of the Capitol, whose office shall be in the Capitol building.

[Par. 5.] Hereafter the transmission of internal revenue stamps to the Internal-revenue officers of the internal revenue service shall be made through the mails stamps to be sent of the United States in registered packages.

by mail.

[Par. 6.] Hereafter no storekeeper shall receive a greater compensation Compensation of than four dollars per day; and said gaugers and storekeepers, respec- gaugers and storekeepers. tively shall only receive compensation when rendering actual service. R. S., §§ 3153, 3157. 1879, June 21, ch. 34.

And it shall be the duty of the President, and he is hereby authorized and directed, to reduce the number of internal revenue districts to not exceeding one hundred and thirty-one in the manner heretofore provided by law, which reduction shall take effect on the first day of September, eighteen hundred and seventy-six or as soon thereafter as may be practicable. And sections thirty-one hundred and fifty-nine, and thirty-one hundred and sixty of the Revised Statutes, and all laws and parts of laws in conflict with the provisions of the foregoing paragraphs relating to the internal revenue service, are hereby repealed.(2)

The powers of transfer, and of suspension, of officers conferred upon supervisors by section thirty-one hundred and sixty-three of the Revised Statutes, are hereby vested in the Commissioner of Internal Revenue; and all other powers conferred, and duties imposed, by said section upon supervisors, are hereby conferred and imposed upon collectors of internal revenue within their respective districts.

NOTES (1) That part of the resolution of 1870, July 15, No. 131 (16 Stat. L., 391) here referred to, is incorporated into § 1825 of the Revised Statutes.

(2) The sections hereby repealed are so noted and printed in the second edition of the Revised Statutes.

Internal-revenue districts reduced. R. S., § 3141.

Supervisors of internal revenue abolished, repealing

R. S., § 3159, 3160.

power of, transferred to Commis

sioner and collectors.

R. S., §§ 3154, 3159, 3160,3163. 1879, March 1, ch. 125, § 2.

Suspension of In case of the supervision (3) of a collector, under the power hereby collectors of inter- conferred, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue shall, as soon therereported to Presi- after as practicable, report the case to the President through the Secretary of the Treasury for such action as he may deem proper.

nal revenue to be

dent.

Special agents in

customs service;

number and com-
pensation of.
R. S., §§ 2649

2651.

1878, June 19, ch. 329, § 1, par. 7.

And sections twenty-six hundred and forty-nine, twenty-six hundred and fifty, and twenty-six hundred and fifty-one of the Revised Statutes, and all laws and parts of laws authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury to appoint special agents to be employed in the customs service and classifying them and regulating the duties of said agents, shall be so modified as to authorize the appointment of only twenty special agents, each of whom shall receive a compensation of not exceeding eight dollars per day, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury, and actual traveling expenses when actually employed in the duties of such agency. Packages of spir- And sections thirty-three hundred and twenty-one of the Revised its filled on pre- Statutes, and thirty-three hundred and twenty-three, so far as the latter dealer to be relates to wholesale liquor-dealers' packages filled on the premises of stamped under wholesale liquor dealers, shall, from and after ten days from the passage regulations of of this act, be repealed; and packages of distilled spirits filled on the Commissioner; re- premises of any wholesale liquor dealer shall thereafter be stamped under such rules and regulations as the Commissioner of Internal ReveR. S., 3323, in nue may prescribe.(4) part.

ises of wholesale

pealing

R. S., § 3321.

Duties of store- That the Secretary of the Treasury may, upon the recommendation of keeper and gauger the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, impose the duties of storekeeper may be united in one officer, who and gauger upon one officer, where the amount of spirits produced at shall have commis- the distillery, to which such officer may be assigned, is not sufficient, sion and give bond. in the judgment of the Commissioner to warrant the employment of two R. S., § 3153, officers to perform the separate duties of storekeeper and gauger.

3156.

Assistant treas.

abolished.

The Secretary of the Treasury may issue a commission to such officer as storekeeper and gauger, but the compensation for his services as storekeeper and gauger shall be that of storekeeper only.

And the said officer shall before entering upon the discharge of such duties, give a bond in the penal sum of not less than five thousand dollars for the faithful performance of the combined duties of storekeeper and gauger.

[Par. 7.] So much of section thirty-five hundred and ninety-five of urer at Charleston the Revised Statutes as provides for the appointment of an assistant R. S., §§ 3595, treasurer of the United States at Charleston is hereby repealed from 3608, 3615. and after September, thirtieth, eighteen hundred and seventy-six; Depositories of And the Secretary of the Treasury is directed to discontinue, from public money at said date, the depositories at Buffalo, New York Santa Fe, New Mexico, Buffalo, Santa Fé, and Pittsburgh Pennsylvania.

and Pittsburgh

discontinued.

Number of clerks SEC. 3. That whenever, in the judgment of the head of any department, of higher grade the duties assigned to a clerk of one class can be as well performed by a may be diminished and of lower in- clerk of a lower class or by a female clerk, it shall be lawful for him to dicreased, within ap- minish the number of clerks of the higher grade and increase the number propriation, &c. of the clerks of the lower grade within the limit of the total appropriaR. S., §§ 161, 163, tion for such clerical service:

167.

and their widows

Discharged sol- Provided, That in making any reduction of force in any of the execudiers and sailors tive departments, the head of such department shall retain those persons and orphans to be who may be equally qualified who have been honorably discharged from preferred in retain- the military or naval service of the United States, and the widows and ing clerks, &c. orphans of deceased soldiers and sailors.

R. S., § 1754.

Clerks, agents,

SEC. 5. That the executive officers of the Government are hereby prolaborers, &c., not hibited from employing any clerk, agent, engineer, draughtsman mesto be employed in departments bo- senger watchman, laborer, or other employee, in any of the executive

yond provisions of law.

NOTES.-(3) This word should be suspension, instead of supervision, as the context shows, and as it was in the former act on this subject, but it is engrossed on the roll as here printed.

R. S., § 171.

(4) These amendments have been incorporated into the second edition of the Revised Statutes in the sections referred to.

departments in the city of Washington, or elsewhere beyond provision made by law.

Penalty for officers not appointed ing to or receiving by President giv

SEC. 6. That all executive officers or employees of the United States not appointed by the President, with the advice and consent of the Senate, are prohibited from requesting, giving to, or receiving from, any other officer or employee of the Government, any money or property or from other officers other thing of value for political purposes;

money, &c., for

And any such officer or employee who shall offend against the pro- political purposes. visions of this section shall be at once discharged from the service of the United States;

And he shall also be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof shall be fined in a sum not exceeding five hundred dollars.

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R. S., § 3915. 1877, Feb. 27, ch. 69, par. 138.

SEC. 9. (5) That the Secretaries respectively of the Departments of Postage stamps State, Treasury, War, Navy, and Interior, and the Attorney-General, how obtained. for Departments; are authorized to make requisitions upon the Postmaster-General for the necessary amount of postage stamps for the use of their Departments not exceeding the amount stated in the estimates submitted to Congress; and upon presentation of proper vouchers therefor at the Treasury, the amount thereof shall be credited to the appropriation for the service of the Post Office Department for the same fiscal year. [August 15, 1876.]

NOTE.-(5) This section is repeated in act of 1877, ch. 102, § 2 (19 Stat. L., 319), and in act of 1878, ch. 359, § 2 (20 Stat. L., 206).

15 Opin. Att'yGen., 262.

CHAPTER 289.

AN ACT MAKING APPROPRIATIONS FOR THE CURRENT AND CONTINGENT EXPENSES OF
THE INDIAN DEPARTMENT, AND FOR FULFILLING TREATY-STIPULATIONS WITH VA-
RIOUS INDIAN TRIBES, FOR THE YEAR ENDING JUNE THIRTIETH, EIGHTEEN HUN-
DRED AND SEVENTY-SEVEN, AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES.

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Aug. 15, 1876.

19 Stat. L., 176.

No further apmade for Sioux Inpropriations to be dians until they

[Par. 1.] Hereafter there shall be no appropriation made for the subsistence of said [Sioux] Indians, unless they shall first agree to relinquish all right and claim to any country outside the boundaries of the permanent reservation established by the treaty of eighteen hundred release certain and sixty-eight for said Indians; claims; nor unless they receive supAnd also so much of their said permanent reservation as lies west of plies at places desthe one hundred and third meridian of longitude, and shall also grant ignated. right of way over said reservation to the country thus ceded for wagon Treaty (15 Stat. or other roads, from convenient and accessible points on the Missouri L., 635). River, in all not more than three in number;

And unless they will receive all such supplies herein provided for, and provided for by said treaty of eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, at such points and places on their said reservation, and in the vicinity of the Missouri River, as the President may designate; and the further sum of twenty thousand dollars is hereby appropriated to be expended under the direction of the President of the United States for the purpose of carrying into effect the foregoing provision:

And provided also, That no further appropriation for said Sioux In. -nor until ardians for subsistence shall hereafter be made until some stipulation, rangements are agreement, or arrangement shall have been entered into by said Indians

made for their selfsupport.

Contracts for

with the President of the United States, which is calculated and designed to enable said Indians to become self-supporting:

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[Par. 2.] Hereafter contracts for transportation [of goods for the various transportation of tribes of Indians] involving an expenditure of more than one thousand Indian supplies to dollars shall be advertised and let to the lowest bidder.

be advertised for

and given to lowest bidder. R. S., § 2083. 1875, March 3, ch. 132, § 7. 1877, March 3, ch. 101.

In contracts in

Indian service pro

filed and Secretary to report to Con

gress.

- abstract to be

filed with Second
Comptroller.
R. S., §§ 468, 469,

2083.

Estimates for In

*

SEC. 3. That in all lettings of contracts in connection with the Indian service, the proposals or bids received shall be filed and preserved;

And in the annual report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, there shall be embodied a detailed and tabular statement of all bids and proposals received for any services, supplies, or annuity-goods for the Indian service, together with a detailed statement of all awards of contracts made for any such services, supplies, and annuity goods for which said bids or proposals were received;

And an abstract of all bids or proposals received for the supplies or services embraced in any contract shall be attached to, and filed with, the said contract when the same is filed in the office of the Second Comp troller of the Treasury.

SEC. 4. That hereafter the estimates for appropriations for the Indian dian appropria- service shall be presented in such form as to show the amounts required tions; how pre- for each of the agencies in the several States or Territories, and for said States and Territories respectively.

sented.

R. S., § 3669.

Appointment SEC. 5. And hereafter the Commissioner of Indian Affairs shall have and regulation of the sole power and authority to appoint Traders to the Indian tribes Indian traders by and to make such rules and regulations as he may deem just and proper R. S., $$ 463, specifying the kind and quantity of goods and the prices at which such goods shall be sold to the Indians.

Commissioner.

2129-2131.

Purchase of In

SEC. 6. That the Commissioner of Indian Affairs shall advertise for dian supplies to be all supplies after advertiseirent, except, &c. R. S., 46,

2083.

Provided, that the purchase of supplies for sixty days may be made in open market.

And provided further that to meet any exigency of the service purchases may be made in open market to an extent not to exceed two thousand dollars at any one time. [August 15, 1876.]

Aug. 15, 1876.

19 Stat. L., 200.

Certain products

Sandwich Islands

476, 478, 480.

CHAPTER 290.

AN ACT TO CARRY INTO EFFECT A CONVENTION BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA AND HIS MAJESTY THE KING OF THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, SIGNED ON
THE THIRTIETH DAY OF JANUARY, EIGHTEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIVE.

Certain products of Hawaiian or Sandwich Islands admitted free of duty.

Be it enacted, &c., That whenever the President of the United States of Hawaiian or shall receive satisfactory evidence that the legislature of the Hawaiian admitted free of Islands have passed laws on their part to give full effect to the produty. visions of the convention between the United States and his Majesty R. S., § 2504, 2d the King of the Hawaiian Islands, signed on the thirtieth day of Janued., pp. 468, 473, ary, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, he is hereby authorized to issue his proclamation declaring that he has such evidence; and thereupon, from the date of such proclamation, (1) the following articles, being the growth and manufacture or produce of the Hawaiian Islands, to wit, Arrow-root; castor oil; bananas; nuts; vegetables, dried and undried, preserved and unpreserved; hides and skins, undressed; rice; pulu; seeds; plants; shrubs, or trees; muscovado, brown, and all other unre

NOTE.-(1) On the 9th of September, 1876, the President issued his proclamation declaring that he had evidence that the Hawaiian Islands had passed laws to give effect to the convention here referred See articles of convention and reciprocity and proclamation hereinafter printed, 1876, No. 7, and articles following same, page 626.

to.

fined sugar, meaning hereby the grades of sugar heretofore commonly imported from the Hawaiian Islands, and now known in the markets of San Francisco and Portland as "Sandwich Island sugar;" syrups of sugar cane, melado, and molasses; tallow,

Shall be introduced into the United States free of duty so long as the said convention shall remain in force. [August 15, 1876.]

CHAPTER 297.

AN ACT RELATING TO PARTITION OF REAL ESTATE IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.

SECTION

1. Partition of lands among tenants in common in District of Columbia; how made.

Be it enacted, &c.

Aug. 15. 1876.

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Partition of

ants in common in

[SECTION 1], That all tenants in common and coparceners of any estate in lands tenements, or hereditaments, equitable as well as legal, lands among tenwithin the District of Columbia, may, in the discretion of the Court, be District of Columcompelled in any court of competent jurisdiction, to make, or suffer par- bia; how made. tition of such estate or estates.

In proceedings for partition all persons in interest shall be made parties in the same manner as in cases of equity jurisdiction.

And in proceedings for partition under this act, the court may in addition to the powers herein conferred, exercise such powers as are or may be conferred by virtue of the general equity jurisdiction of the court.

SEC. 2. That the court, in all cases, in decreeing partition, may, if it satisfactorily appears that said lands and tenements, or any estate or interest therein, cannot be divided without loss or injury to the parties interested, decree a sale thereof, and a division of the money arising from such sale among the parties, according to their respective rights and interests.

Court may de

creo sale and divis

ion of proceeds.

SEC. 3. That in all such sales, unless the court shall by special order In case of sale, direct or require on good cause shown, that the sale be made for cash, be made. how payments to the purchase money shall be payable, one third on day of sale, one-third in one year, and one-third in two years thereafter, with interest, the deferred payments to be secured to the parties, according to their respective interests, by good and sufficient mortgage upon the premises so sold, which shall be subject to the approval of the court. [August 15, 1876.]

CHAPTER 300.

AN ACT TO REGULATE THE ISSUE OF ARTIFICIAL LIMBS TO DISABLED SOLDIERS, SEA-
MEN, AND OTHERS.

Aug. 15, 1876.

19 Stat. L., 203.

SECTION

1. Soldiers and sailors maimed to have artificial limbs, &c., once in five years.

2. to have transportation furnished to obtain them.

Be it enacted, &c.

SECTION

This act not subject to provisions of former
act.

Soldiers and sail

have artificial

[SECTION 1], That every officer, soldier, seaman and marine, who, in the line of duty, in the military or naval service of the United States, ors maimed to shall have lost a limb, or sustained bodily injuries, depriving him of the limbs, &c., once in use of any of his limbs, shall receive once every five years an artificial five years. limb or appliance, or commutation therefor, as provided and limited by R. S., 4787, existing laws, under such regulations as the Surgeon-General of the 4788. Army may prescribe;

1877, Feb. 27, ch. 69, par. 168.

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