Specific appropriation.For the discharge of such demands against the United States, on account of the civil department, not otherwise provided for, as shall have been in due course of settlement at the treasury, two thousand dollars.
For compensation granted by law to the Chief Justice, the Associate Judges, and District Judges of the United States, including the Chief Judges and Associate Judges of the District of Columbia, and the Attorney General, sixty-two thousand dollars.
For like compensation granted to the several District Attorneys of the United States, including those of the several territories, four thousand six hundred and fifty dollars.
For like compensations granted to the several Marshals for the Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, New Jersey, North Carolina, Kentucky, Ohio, East and West Tennessee, and of the several territories of the United States, three thousand two hundred dollars.
For defraying expenses of the Supreme, Circuit and District Courts of the United States, including the District of Columbia, and of jurors and witnesses, in aid of the funds arising from fines, penalties and forfeitures, and for defraying the expenses of prosecutions for offences against the United States, and for the safe-keeping of prisoners, forty thousand dollars.
For the payment of sundry pensions granted by the late government, eight hundred and sixty dollars.
For the payment of the annual allowance to the invalid pensioners of the United States, ninety-eight thousand dollars.
For the maintenance and support of light-houses, beacons, buoys, and public piers, stakeages of channels, bars and shoals, including repairs and improvements, and contingent expenses, sixty-nine thousand one hundred dollars and twenty-eight cents.
For the following objects, being the balances of former appropriations, for the same purposes, carried to the surplus fund, viz:
For erecting light-houses at the mouth of the Mississippi river, and at or near the pitch of Cape Look-out, in North Carolina, twenty thousand dollars.
For building a light-house on the south point of Cumberland island, in Georgia, four thousand dollars.
For building a light-house on the south point of Sapelo island, in Georgia, and placing buoys and beacons on Dobay bar and Beach point, four thousand four hundred and ninety-four dollars and eighty-one cents.
For placing buoys and beacons at or near the entrance of Beverly harbour, in Massachusetts, three hundred and fifty dollars.
For erecting two lights on Lake Erie, viz: on or near Bird island, and on or near Presque Isle, four thousand dollars.
For placing two beacons and buoys at or near the entrance of the harbour of New Haven, in Connecticut, one hundred dollars.
For placing buoys at the entrance of the harbour of Edgartown, in Massachusetts, one thousand four hundred and forty-three dollars and forty-three cents.
For placing buoys at or near the main bar and new inlet bar off Cape Fear, in North Carolina, two thousand dollars.
For erecting a beacon on a point of land near New inlet, in North Carolina, one thousand eight hundred dollars.
For completing the fitting up of all the light-houses with Winslow Lewis’s improvements, in addition to the sums heretofore appropriated for that purpose, forty thousand dollars.
For defraying the expense of surveying the public lands within the several territories of the United States, sixty thousand dollars.
For the support and safe-keeping of prisoners of war, four hundred thousand dollars.
For the contingent expenses of government, twenty thousand dollars.