pay, in money, except quarters actually provided for and occupied by such officers.
Office of Com. Gen. of Purchases abolished.
Duties to be performed by whom, &c.Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, That the office of Commissary General of Purchases, sometimes called Commissary of Purchases, shall be, and the same is hereby abolished, and the duties thereof shall hereafter be performed by the officers of the Quartermaster’s department, with such of the officers and clerks now attached to the Purchasing department as shall be authorized by the Secretary of War, and under such regulations as shall be prescribed by the said Secretary, under the sanction of the President of the United States.
Offices of Inspector General, 3 paymasters, &c. abolished.
1846, ch. 3.Sec. 4. And be it further enacted, That, within one month after the passage of this act, the offices of one inspector general, of three paymasters, two surgeons, and ten assistant surgeons of the army shall be abolished, and that number of paymasters, surgeons, and assistant surgeons, shall be discharged by the President, and they shall be allowed three months’ pay, in addition to the pay and emoluments to which they may be entitled at the time of their discharge.
Employment of a person to superintend the manufacture of iron canon authorized.Sec. 5. And be it further enacted, That a competent person may be employed by the Ordnance bureau, under the direction of the Secretary of War, for such time as may be necessary, to superintend the manufacture of iron cannon at the several foundries where such cannon may be made under contracts with the United States, whose pay and emoluments shall not exceed those of a major of ordnance during the time he shall be so employed, to be paid out of the appropriations for armament of fortifications; and for the services rendered in such superintendence since the first day of March, eighteen hundred and forty-one, under the authority of the War Department, the same compensation shall be allowed as herein provided.
Rations allowed to certain officers by acts of the 3d March 1797, ch. 16, and 16th March 1802, ch. 9, hereafter to be allowed to the following officers only, &c.
1847, ch. 61, § 20.Sec. 6. And be it further enacted, That the rations authorized to be allowed to a brigadier while commander-in-chief, and to each officer while commanding a separate post, by the act of March third, seventeen hundred and ninety-seven, and to the commanding officers of each separate post, by the act of March sixteen, eighteen hundred and two, shall hereafter be allowed to the following officers and no others: to the major general commanding the army, and to every officer commanding in chief a separate army, actually in the field; to the generals commanding the eastern and western geographical divisions; to the colonels or other officers commanding military geographical departments; to the commandant of each permanent or fixed post, garrisoned with troops, including the superintendent of the military academy at West Point, who is regarded as the commandant of that post.
Approved, August 23, 1842.
Statute ⅠⅠ.
Chap. CLXXXVII.—An Act to provide for the satisfaction of claims arising under the fourteenth and nineteenth articles of the treaty of Dancing Rabbit creek, concluded in September, one thousand eight hundred and thirty.
1845, ch. 72.
Vol. ix. p. 114.Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the act approved on the third of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, entitled “An act for the appointment of commissioners to adjust the claims to reservations of land under the fourteenth article of the treaty of eighteen hundred and thirty, with the Choctaw Indians: and also, the act approved on the twenty-second day of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-eight, entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act for the appointment of commissioners to adjust the claims to reservations of land under the fourteenth article of the treaty of eighteen hundred and thirty, with the Choctaw Indians,’ so far as the same are not repealed or modified by the provisions of this act,” be, and the same are hereby,