Expenditures and balances of navy appropriations. Second Comptroller of navy appropriations......... Expenditures under the head of "contingent expenses of the navy, as settled and allowed at the office of the Fourth Auditor of the Treasury, for the year ending June 30, 1859. Abstract of.... Expenditures of the navy, as settled and allowed at the Fourth Audi- tor's office. Statement of contingent...
Expenditures of the Post Office Department for the year ending June 30, 1859. Statement of receipts and.....
Expenditures of the government for the year ending June 30, 1859, and quarter ending September 30, 1859. Statement of.... Expenditures of the marine hospital fund, &c. Statement of receipts
Expenditures from 1789 to 1859, and the particular tariff and price of lands under which the revenue from those sources was collected. Statement of revenue collected under the heads of customs, pub- lic lands, and miscellaneous sources, &c., and the.. Explorations of the San Juan and Yellow Stone rivers and the sinking of artesian wells. Report in relation to.......... Exported from the United States during the year ending June 30, 1859. Statement of the value of foreign merchandise imported into, and the value of foreign merchandise and domestic produce....... Exports of specie and bullion; the imports entered for consumption, and specie and bullion; the domestic exports and specie and bul- lion; the excess of specie and bullion exports over imports of the same, and the excess of imports over exports of the same. Statement of the imports and......... Exports of foreign merchandise and domestic produce to the British East Indies, Phillipine Islands, Cuba, Porto Rico, Two Sicilies, Hayti, New Granada, Venezuela, Brazil, and China, during the year ending June 30, 1859. Statement of the value of articles of foreign production imported into the United States from, and the........
Export and import trade of the United States with Great Britain and France for the years ending June 30, 1853, 1854, 1855, 1856, and 1857; also the quantity and value of iron and manufactures of wool from Great Britain, and manufactures of silk, wines, and distilled liquors, from France. Statement of the........ Exported annually from 1821 to 1859; also, amount of importation
over exportation and of exportation over importation during the same years. Statement of the amount of coin and bullion Exports and imports from the beginning of the government to June 30, 1859. Statement of the gross value of.....
Exported to foreign countries from 1846 to 1859. Statement of the value of manufactured articles of domestic produce......... Exports of domestic produce, &c., of the United States, annually, from 1847 to 1859. Summary view of the....
Exported annually from 1821 to 1859. Statement of the value of for- eign merchandise and domestic produce.....
Exported annually from 1821 to 1859, and value reëxported from ware- house, under act of April, 1846. Statement of the value of du- tiable merchandise re-......
Exported annually from 1821 to 1859. Statement of the aggregate value of breadstuffs and provisions..
Exported annually from 1821 to 1859, and the average price thereof
per pound. Statement of the value and quantity of cotton....... Exported annually from 1821 to 1859. Statement of tobacco and rice, Exported to foreign countries from 1840 to 1859; and the domestic ex- ports of like articles for the same periods. Statement of the value of iron and manufactures of iron, and iron and steel; steel; wool and manufactures thereof; manufactures of cotton; silk and manufactures thereof; flax, linen, and linen fabrics; hemp and manufactures thereof; Manilla, sun, and other hemps of India; and silk and worsted goods imported from and Exports to and imports from Canada and other British possessions in North America from 1851 to 1859. Statement of.
Exports of the growth, produce, and manufacture of the United States during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1859. Statement of the value of........ Exports subject to duty, and such as are not subject to duty, distin-
guishing Canada from the other provinces. Statement of the trade and commerce of the United States with the British North American provinces annually since 1850, showing the imports and.......... Exports of domestic produce, the quantity and value shipped to each country, the amount in American vessels, in foreign vessels, and the aggregate value thereof, (Com. and Nav.) General state- ment of the..... Exports of domestic produce, with the articles and their value classi- fied under the several heads of production, (Com. and Nav.) Summary statement of the. Exported and the quality and value shipped to each country, (Com. and Nav.) General statement of articles of foreign merchan- dise.......
Exported, with the amount in American vessels, in foreign vessels, and the aggregate value thereof, (Com. and Nav.) Summary state- ment of the value of foreign merchandise... Exported from each collection district in the country, (Com. and Nav. Rep.) Statement of the quantity and value of domestic pro- duce....... Exported from each collection district, (Com. and Nav. Rep.) State- ment of the quantity and value of foreign merchandise..... Exports and imports from each foreign country, &c., during the year ending June 30, 1859, (Com. and Nav.) Statement of the....
Fees in the consular courts of the United States in China. Regulations of clerks, marshals, and criers'. Fees received by the consular officers in 1858, with a tariff of consular fees and list of consular officers on the 31st December, 1859, &c. Statement of..
Finances. Annual report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the state of the......
Fortifications in 1859. Report on the armament of......
Fort Laramie to Fort Randall. Report and diary of Lieutenant An- derson's march, in August, 1859, from.....
Forts and other military defenses of the United States in 1859. Report of the condition, repairs, &c., of the...................................
Fourth Auditor. (See Auditor.) France and England in relation to the verification of the nationality of shipping. Correspondence with the diplomatic representa- tives of.....
France for the years ending June 30, 1853, 1854, 1855, 1856, and 1857, Statement of imports, &c., from.....
Frank of Senator Douglas. Report of the United States district attor- ney for the District of Columbia in relation to the trial of Wil- liam D. Phillips, charged with counterfeiting the......... Funds on the books of the Treasury for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1859. Statement of balances of appropriations of trust.....
General Land Office. (See Land Office.)
Gold of domestic production deposited at the Mint of the United States and its branches during the year ending June 30, 1859. State- ment of the amount of....
Gold and silver coins of different nations. Statement of the weight, fineness, and value of.....
Great Britain, correspondence relating to the claim of, to the Island of San Juan....
Great Britain, of December 15, 1848. Settlement of further details of postal service between the United States and Great Britain and Ireland, under the postal treaty with.....
Great Britain and France for the years ending June 30, 1853, 1854, 1855, 1856, and 1857. Statement of imports from..... Great Salt Lake City, in Utah. Report of an expedition from Dalles City, in Oregon, to.....
Greenville, in said district. Report and correspondence relative to depredations upon the mail in the Greenville district, South Carolina, and the insufficiency of the post office building at....................
Hall's mail route preemption case. Report of the Secretary of the In- terior, with copies of papers in reference to Jacob.
Harbors on Lakes Michigan, St. Clair, Erie, Ontario, and Champlain, for the year 1859. Report on the condition and progress of the works on the......
Harper's Ferry, October 17, 1859. Report of Colonel Lee, com- manding the United States troops in suppressing, by military force, the insurrection of John Brown and his followers at......... Hemp imported. (See Imported.)
Hospital for the Insane in the District of Columbia for the year ending June 30, 1859. Report of the Board of Visitors of the government. Hospital fund for the relief of sick and disabled seamen in the ports of the United States. Annual report of receipts and expenditures of the marine......
Hospitals. Report of the engineer in charge of the marine.. Hospitals, the seamen or patients admitted therein, number and com- pensation of persons employed therein, and total expenses of each, for each of the years 1854, 1855, 1856, 1857, 1858, and 1859. Statement of the number and location of United States.... I.
Imports, the countries from whence imported, with the quantity and value of each class of merchandise. (Commerce and Naviga- tion Report.) General statement of.......... Imports in American vessels, in foreign vessels, the value from each country, and the aggregate value thereof. (Commerce and Navigation Report.) Summary statement of the value of......... Imported into each collection district. (Commerce and Navigation Report.) Statement of the value of foreign merchandise....... Imported during the year ending June 30, 1859. (Commerce and Navigation Report.) Statements (general and summary) ex- hibiting the indirect trade of the United States, the countries of production and shipment, with the value of the articles.......... Imports from each foreign country, and the tonnage of American and foreign vessels arriving from and departing to each foreign coun- try in the year 1858-59. (Commerce and Navigation.) State- ment of the value of exports to and
Imported and exported annually from 1821 to 1859, also the amount of importation over exportation, and of exportation over importa- tion, during the same years. Statement of coin and bullion.......|
Imports from the beginning of the government to June 30, 1859. State- ment of the gross value of exports and..... Imported, reëxported, and consumed annually, from 1821 to 1859, with the estimated population and rate of consumption per capita, during the same period. Statement of the value of foreign mer- chandise Imports, and the imports consumed in the United States, exclusive of specie, during each fiscal year from 1821 to 1859, with the value of foreign and domestic exports, exclusive of specie, and the tonnage employed during the same period. Statement of the
Statement of the quantity of
Imported annually from 1843 to 1859. wine, spirits, &c....... Imports, annually, from 1821 to 1859. Statement of the value of........ Imported from and exported to foreign countries from 1840 to 1859; and the domestic exports of like articles for the same periods. Statement of the value of iron, and iron and steel; steel; wool, and manufactures thereof; manufactures of cotton; silk, and manufactures thereof; flax; linen, and linen fabrics; hemp, and manufactures thereof; Manilla, sun, and other hemps of India; and silk and worsted goods......
Imported, annually, from 1847 to 1859, with the duties which accrued thereon during each year, respectively, and brandies for the years 1856, 1857, 1858, and 1859. Statement of the value of iron, manufactures of iron and iron and steel; steel; sugar; wines; and all fabrics of which wool, cotton, silk, flax, or hemp is a com- ponent part....... Imports from Canada, and other British possessions in North America, from 1851 to 1859. Statement of exports to and... Imports and exports subject to duty, and such as are not subject to
duty, distinguishing Canada from the other provinces. State- ment of the trade and commerce between the United States and the British North American provinces annually since 1850, showing the........
Imported annually from 1844 to 1859, (after deducting reëxportations,)
and the amount of duty which accrued on each during the same period. Statement of the value of woolens, cottons, hempen goods, iron, and manufactures of iron, sugar, hemp, (unmanu- factured,) salt, and coal........
Imported into the United States during the fiscal years ending June 30, 1856, 1857, 1858, and 1859. Statement of the quantity and value of iron and steel Imported during the fiscal years ending June 30, 1856, 1857, 1858, and 1859, with the duties accruing thereon; also the value of articles imported free of duty during the same period, including those made free by the act of March 3, 1857. Statement of the value of merchandise.....
Imported into and of foreign merchandise and domestic produce ex- ported from the United States during the year ending June 30, 1859. Statement of the value of foreign merchandise...... Imports and exports of specie and bullion, the imports entered for consumption and specie and bullion, the domestic exports and specie and bullion, the excess of specie and bullion exports over specie and bullion imports, and the excess of specie and bullion imports over specie and bullion exports. Statement of the...... Imported into the United States from, and the exports of foreign mer- chandise and domestic produce to, the British East Indies, Phillipine Islands, Cuba, Porto Rico, Two Sicilies, Hayti, New Granada, Venezuela, Brazil, and China, during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1859. Statement of the values of articles of foreign production......
Imports from Great Britain and France for the fiscal years ending June 30, 1853, 1854, 1855, 1856, and 1857; also, the quantity and value of iron, and manufactures of iron, and manufactures of wool from the former, and manufactures of silk, wines, and distilled liquors from the latter, &c. Statement of the aggregate.
Indian Affairs, of the operations of the Office of Indian Affairs for 1859. Report, with compendium, of the Commissioner of..... (See list of documents accompanying the above at page 395.) Indian agency for 1859. Report of B. H. Colgrove, of the New York. Indian agency for 1859. Reports of A. M. Fitch, of the Michigan....... Indian agency for the Indians in the vicinity of Green Bay for 1859. Reports of A. D. Bonesteel, E. A. Goodenough, Sarah J. Stin- gerland, D. Lewis, J. Stingerland, O. Andrews, R. Dousman, F. Haas, I. Wetzel, and S. J. Linch, of the... Indian superintendency for 1859. Reports of Messrs. Robinson, Vaughan, Hollins, Redfield, Twiss, Bent, Dennison, Vander- slice, Badger, Newsom, Murphy, Jackson, Shultz, Fuller, Dickey, and Clover, of the central....... Indian superintendency for 1859. Reports of Messrs. Rector, D'Orn, Shoenmakers, Butler, Torry, Stover, Harrell, Jones, Reese, Garrett, Loughridge, Ruble, Rutherford, Lilley, Cooper, Bying- ton, Copeland, Hotchkin, Stark, Paine, Frothingham, Cham- berlain, Kingsbury, Baker, Ainslie, Dukes, Hobbs, Folsom, Wilson, Hamill, Carr, and Robinson, of the southern..... Indian superintendency for 1859. Reports, correspondence, &c., of Messrs. Rector, Cooper, Lieutenant Offley, Neighbors, Sturm, Governor Runnels, Ross, Coombes, Palmer, Sengle, Ford, Leeper, Harris, Baylor, Gurley, Captain Plummer, Secretary Thompson, acting Secretary of War; J. M. Smith, Erath, peace commissioners; Lieut. Washington, J. H. Brown, and Blain, relating to the Texas......
Indian superintendency for 1859. Reports of Messrs Collins, Carson, Steck, Baker, Walker, and Mowry, of the New Mexico....... Indian superintendency for 1859. Reports of Messrs. Forney, Dodge, Farris, Hurt, and Humphreys, relating to the Utah.... Indian superintendency for 1859. Reports of Messrs. Geary, Sim- mons, Shaw, Ford, Gosnel, Kimball, Pagett, Mounts, Perkins, Lansdale, Cain, councils with the Nez Percés, Owen, Metcalfe, Drew, Miller, Dennison, and Abbott, relating to the Oregon and Washington........
Indian superintendency for 1859. Reports, &c., of Messrs. Buel, Geiger, Lewis, and Vineyard, relating to the California........ Indian trust fund, with accompanying papers. Reports, with state- ments of the condition of the........
Indian tribes, payable on time. Statement of amount due under treaties with various
Indian national fund, &c. Statement of stock held by the United States in trust for the Chickasaw...... Indian title, survey of the public lands, establishment of an assay office, and a new Territory out of portions of New Mexico, Utah, Kansas, and Nebraska. Memorials of residents at and near the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains, praying the ex- tinguishment of the............. Indians who roam near the Arkansas river, west of 100th degree of west longitude, with the Arrapahoes and Cheyennes, located below the south fork of the Platte river; and, also, for a council with the Red Lake Chippewas and the Indians of Red River, in the State of Minnesota, for the extinguishment of the title to their lands in that State. Estimate of the amount that will be required to hold a council with the Kiowas, Camanches, and other....... Indian office and the present superintendents and agents in California, and J. Ross Browne, in relation to the California Indians. respondence between the.........
Infirmary, with lists of government patients admitted, discharged, and those remaining under treatment. Report of the resident phy- sician of the Washington......
Insane, in the District of Columbia. Report of the Board of Visitors of the government Hospital for the........
Inspectors of steamboats. (See Steamboats.)
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