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Baker, for Speaker's desk, chairs and tables, forty dollars; E. Baker, for furniture for Treasurer's office, thirty-five dollars; Hamilton & Veale, bill of articles furnished Secretary of State, sixty-four dollars and twenty cents; Wykoff & Stringham, for varnishing furniture, papering room, and sign for Governor's room, painting sign, oiling furniture, etc., for Secretary of State's room, signs, etc., for Treasurer's room, signs for Attorney General's room, sign for Senate chamber, oiling banister, and painting flag pole, Representative hall, seventy-two dollars; Jacob Smith, stove pipe, zinc, etc., for Governor's room, seventy-nine dollars and fifty cents; for Treasurer's office stove and pipe, fifteen dollars and twenty-five cents; for office of Secretary of State, for hardware, etc., seventy-nine dollars and forty-eight cents; Adjutant General's office, glass, nine dollars and forty cents; for Supreme Court room, stove, pipe, zinc, etc., forty-nine dollars and fifty-one cents; for zinc and tacks, thirteen dollars and thirty-eight cents; Watson & Rhinehart, cocoa matting, bunting, curtains and other fixtures in State offices and Legislative halls, six hundred and thirty-two dollars and seventy cents; Samuel Sweet, for water for State offices and Legislative hall, forty dollars; Samuel Dodsworth, for printing Auditor's blanks, making boxes, etc., fifty-four dollars; Leroy Crandall, commissioner, locating State Normal School, ten dollars; W. H. Weymouth, hanging curtains, etc., Legislative hall, twenty-one dollars and forty-five cents; A. Cohen, clothing and items furnished convicts in State penitentiary, one thousand and nineteen dollars and seventeen cents; J. B. Billings, oil, brooms, etc., forty-seven dollars and fifty cents; Woods & Abernathy, chairs for Supreme Court room, one hundred and eighteen dollars [and] fifty cents; Woods & Abernathy, chairs, twenty-four dollars and twenty-five cents; George Knapp & Co., books and stationery, etc., for Adjutant General's office, for 1863, two hundred dollars; G. J. Park, medicines furnished convicts, State penitentiary, seventy-one dollars and fifteen cents; S. W. Jones, medical attendance on convicts in State penitentiary, two hundred dollars; Watson & Rhinehart, cocoa matting, one hundred and fifty-two dollars and forty-four cents; Geo. W. Sapp, hauling matting and stationery from Leavenworth, twenty-five dollars; William Chesnut, locating

Insane Asylum, twenty-five dollars; Mr. Hiner, do., five dollars; Mr. Hanway, do., five dollars; J. A. Steele, rent of room for Secretary Lawrence, January, 1863, five dollars; S. W. Eldridge, carpet furnished State, per order of Secretary Robinson, 1862, forty-five dollars; Samuel Dodsworth, for books and stationery, Adjutant General's office, 1863, one hundred and seventy-four dollars; for House journals extra bound, twenty-two dollars and fifty cents; G. Dudley, postage for Adjutant General's department for 1863, eighty-one dollars and fifteen cents; E. Baker, for case for Adjutant General's office, seventy-five dollars; A. S. Thomas, Clerk in Adjutant General's office, 1863, two hundred and twenty-seven dollars; H. Bemen, clerk in Adjutant General's office, 1863, thirty-nine dollars; Kansas Zeitung, for translating and publishing laws in German, three hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay for the publishing and translating, at the rate of two dollars per one thousand ems for publishing and translating; E. Baker, for lumber for shelving Auditor's office, twenty-six dollars and ninety cents; Kellam Bros., oil and lamps, Auditor's office, fifteen dollars and fifty cents; Banks & Fitzgerald, for lumber and door, thirty-eight dollars and seventy-seven cents; Hugo Kullak, for lumber furnished and labor performed in fitting up Auditor's office, sixtyfour dollars and ninety-five cents; S. A. Link, pigeon holes, Auditor's office, five dollars; Jacob Smith, stoves, pipe, glass, etc., for Auditor's office, sixty-three dollars and fifty-one cents; Wilcox & Son, buff linen cord and tassel, five dollars and eighty-seven cents; Wykoff & Stringham, graining counter, setting glass, painting sign for Auditor's office, twenty-eight dollars; Hugo Kullak, for laying down carpet in Representative hall, and other labor, twenty dollars; for putting down carpet in Senate chamber and labor, ten dollars; Hugo Kullak, for putting down carpet in Attorney General's room, three dollars; T. Mills, for partition across Supreme Court room, fifty dollars; T. Mills, for glazing in Supreme Court room, eight dollars; M. B. Crawford, putting up books, repairing chairs, and work in the hall, thirty-three dollars and twenty-five cents; M. B. Crawford, for taking care of Clerk's and committee rooms, sixty dollars; Kellam & Bro., for lamps and chimneys, three dollars and sixty-five cents; State penitentiary, fifty thousand

Auditor to issue warrants.

dollars; for boarding, clothing and guarding State prisoners, eight thousand dollars, for the year 1864; for services of Directors of State penitentiary, five hundred dollars; Kansas Zeitung, for printing Governor's message, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; John F. Richard, for rent of armory room for State arms, one hundred dollars, from May 20, 1861, to Dec. 20, 1862; Geo. O. Wilmarth, for blank books, ink and paper, and other stationery, thirty-four dollars; J. B. Billings, for oil, brooms and baskets, forty-five dollars and fifty cents; W. H. Weymouth, for material furnished and labor performed in Supreme Court room, forty-six dollars and twenty-four cents; Watson & Rheinhart, for carpet, cocoa matting, green baize, etc., for Supreme Court room, two hundred and nine dollars and fifteen cents; Drake Bros., for stationery for Supreme Court room, one hundred and thirteen dollars and twenty-five cents; Edwin Bodwell, for tables for Supreme Court room, eighty dollars; W. W. H. Lawrence, for postage stamps for quarter ending on the 31st day of December, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, and postage on papers and drawer rent, twentyfour dollars; Asa Hairgrove, for contingent expenses, Auditor of State's office, for 1863, thirty-one dollars and sixteen cents; Cummings & Stark, for publishing laws in Topeka Daily Tribune, two hundred dollars; J. F. Cummings, for printing blanks for Adjutant General, for the volunteer service, one hundred and fifteen dollars; to enable Commissioners to complete the location of the State Agricultural College lands, one thousand dollars; insurance on State Agricultural College buildings, library and apparatus, $125; lightning rods to said buildings, $60; Register and Receivers of the various land offices in the State, two thousand dollars, or so much thereof as is necessary to be applied to pay said officers for their services in entering up State lands, at thirty-five cents per quarter section; R. McBratney, for furnishing 285 township plats to Commissioners to locate State lands, one hundred and fortytwo dollars and fifty cents; to F. L. Crane, for services as Clerk in Adjutant General's office, one hundred dollars; W. H. Cowan, do., one hundred dollars; Alfred Cappee, do., thirty dollars.

SEC. 2. The Auditor of State is hereby authorized to issue warrants upon the Treasurer of the State for the purpose and

certified and ap

amounts specified in the first section of this act, or so much thereof as may be necessary to liquidate all such accounts, which may be presented to him. All accounts for legislative Accounts to be expenditures, furniture, stationery, lights, fuel and other sup- proved plies, shall be certified to by the Secretary of State and approved by the Governor, as is contemplated in section twenty of an act defining the powers and duties of certain State officers, approved June 3, 1861. All accounts for printing shall be approved by the Secretary of State, Auditor and Treasurer, except the printing of the proclamations of the Governor, which shall be approved by the Governor: Provided, that no account shall be allowed or audited for which no provision has been made by law, and unless a detailed statement containing the several items thereon, verified by affidavit setting forth that the same is just and correct, and remains due and unpaid, and that the amount claimed thereon is actually due, according to the legal or ordinary prices for services rendered or materials furnished, as the case may be, and the Auditor shall audit only the amount so found actually due, dollar for dollar, according to the legal or ordinary compensation or prices for services rendered, salaries or fees of officers, or materials furnished.

SEC. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its publication once in the Topeka Tribune, and the Secretary of State is hereby directed to cause such publication to be made immediately upon its approval by the Governor, which shall constitute such publication.

Approved, March 1, 1864.

THOMAS CARNEY,

Governor.

I hereby certify the foregoing to be a true copy of the enrolled law on file in my office, and that the same was published in the Topeka Tribune for March 5, 1864.

W. W. H. LAWRENCE,
Secretary of State.

Appropriation.

CHAPTER IV.

APPROPRIATION OF CERTAIN MONEYS.

AN ACT appropriating certain moneys in Morris county.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Kansas:

SECTION 1. That all money now in the treasury of Morris
county, and in the hands of the township trustee of Council
Grove township, received in payment of dram shop and tavern
licenses, and not otherwise appropriated, and all money that
may
be received from the same source during the years 1864
and 1865, be and the same is hereby appropriated to aid in
building a school house for the use of graded school district No.
one, Morris county, Kansas.

SEC. 2. This act to take effect from and after its publication in the Daily Topeka Tribune.

Approved, February 15, 1864.

THOMAS CARNEY,

Governor.

I hereby certify the foregoing to be a true copy of the enrolled law on file in my office, and that the same was published in the Topeka Tribune for February 17, 1864.

W. W. H. LAWRENCE,

Secretary of State.

CHAPTER V.

APPROPRIATION TO REFUND GOVERNOR.

AN ACT appropriating money to refund to the Governor, Thomas Carney, expenses incurred by him in protecting the State.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Kansas:

SECTION 1. That the sum of ten thousand eight hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, be and the same is hereby appropriated to refund to Thomas Carney, the amount advanced by him in protecting the State in the year 1863.

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