Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 3.djvu/447

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

boundary line, thence, south with the said boundary, to the north line of township fifteen; thence, east with the said township line, to the place of beginning.District of the land office at St. Louis. And all the lands within the following boundaries shall form a district for the land office established by law at St. Louis, in the county of St. Louis, viz: beginning on the Mississippi river, where the north line of township thirty-four north intersects the same; thence, up and with the Mississippi river to the mouth of Desmoin river; thence, up and with the Desmoin to the north Indian boundary line; thence, west with the said boundary, to the west line of range ten west; thence, south with said range line, to the north line of township thirty-four north; thence, east with the said township line, to the place of beginning.

Time of opening the land offices, &c.
Register and receiver to be appointed.
Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That so soon as, in the opinion of the President of the United States, there shall be a sufficient quantity of the public lands surveyed, within all or either of the land districts hereby established, to authorize the opening of all, or either of the land offices aforesaid, he shall cause the same to be opened, and shall proceed, from time to time, to appoint, with the advice and consent of the Senate, for each of the said offices, a register and a receiver of public moneys, who shall give security in the same sums, and in the same manner, and whose compensation, emoluments, and duties, and authority shall, in every respect, be the same, in relation to the lands which shall be disposed of at their offices, as are, or may be, provided by law, in relation to the registers and receivers of public moneys in the several land offices established for the disposal of the lands of the United StatesAct of May 18, 1796, ch. 29. north-west of the river Ohio and above the mouth of the Kentucky river.

Whenever a land office shall have been established, &c. the President to direct lands to be offered for sale, &c.
Act of March 3, 1811, ch. 46.
Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, That whenever a land office shall have been established in any of the district aforesaid, and a register and receiver of public moneys appointed for the same, the President of the United States shall be, and he is hereby, authorized to direct so much of the public lands lying in such district as shall have been surveyed according to law to be offered for sale, with the same reservations and exceptions, and on the same terms and conditions in every respect, as was provided for the sale of the public lands in the territory of Louisiana, by the tenth section of an act entitled “An act providing for the final adjustment of claims to lands, and for the sale of the public lands, in the territories of Orleans and Louisiana, and to repeal the act passed for the same purpose, and approved February sixteenth,[1] one thousand eight hundred and eleven,” except that the register and receiver of public moneys alone may be competent to superintend the public sales, and that, instead of one township for the support of a seminary of learning,Two townships for the support of a seminary of learning; provided, &c. there shall be two townships located for the purpose by the Secretary of the Treasury, and reserved from sale: Provided, That one of said townships shall be located on the waters of the Missouri, and the other on the waters of the Arkansas.

Approved, February 17, 1818.


Statute I.


Feb. 19, 1818.

Chap. XIII.An Act making appropriations for the military service of the United States for the year one thousand eight hundred and eighteen.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the following sums be, and the same are hereby, respectively, appropriated, viz:

Pay.For the pay of the army of the United States, one million three hundred and three thousand dollars:

Subsistence.For subsistence, one million twenty-five thousand nine hundred and twenty-seven dollars:

Forage.For forage for officers, three thousand one hundred and sixty-eight dollars:

  1. This act was passed on the 15th Feb., 1811.