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        <title><emph>Acts and Resolutions of the First Session of the Provisional 
Congress of the Confederate States, Held at Montgomery, ALA. :</emph>
Electronic Edition.</title>
        <author>Confederate States of America</author>
        <funder>Funding from the Institute of Museum and Library
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        <note anchored="yes">Call number 14 Conf.   1861   
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    <front>
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            <p>[Title Page Image]</p>
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      <titlePage>
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart type="main">ACTS AND RESOLUTIONS<lb/>
OF THE
<lb/>
FIRST SESSION
<lb/>
OF THE
<lb/>
PROVISIONAL CONGRESS
<lb/>
OF THE
<lb/>
CONFEDERATE STATES,</titlePart>
          <titlePart type="main">HELD AT MONTGOMERY, ALA.</titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <docImprint><pubPlace>RICHMOND:</pubPlace>
<publisher>ENQUIRER BOOK AND JOB PRESS.</publisher>
 <publisher>BY TYLER, WISE, ALLEGRE &amp; SMITH.</publisher>
<docDate>1861.</docDate></docImprint>
      </titlePage>
    </front>
    <pb id="acts35" n="35"/>
    <body>
      <div1 type="text">
        <head>ACTS AND RESOLUTIONS.</head>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 1.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>To appoint Messrs. Reid &amp; Shorter Printers to the Congress.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved</hi>, That Messrs. Reid &amp; Shorter be appointed printers to this Congress while it
holds its sessions in Montgomery; and that all the work to be done, shall, in style and
quality, equal that done for the State of Alabama, and shall be paid for at the same
proportionate rates of compensation.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 5, 1861.</dateline></closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 2] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>Accepting the appropriation of Five hundred Thousand<lb/> Dollars, made by the General Assembly of the State of <lb/>Alabama.</head>
          <p>1st. <hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That this
Congress accept the liberal offer of the General Assembly of the State of Alabama, to
place at the disposal of this body the sum of five hundred thousand dollars as a loan to the
Government of the Confederacy now being formed.</p>
          <p>2d. <hi rend="italics">Resolved by the authority aforesaid</hi>, That this Congress place the highest appreciation
upon this generous, patriotic and considerate action of the State of Alabama and realize in
it the zealous devotion of the people of that State to the cause of “Southern
Independence.”</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 8, 1861.</dateline></closer>
        </div2>
        <pb id="acts36" n="36"/>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 3.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>For the preservation of the Records of Congress.</head>
          <p>WHEREAS, It is necessary that the records of this Congress be placed in a condition of
safety, and those pertaining to proceedings with closed doors in a condition of secrecy,
therefore,</p>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That the President
of Congress be, and he is hereby authorized and instructed to make proper provision for
the purposes herein declared.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED<dateline> February 8, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 4.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>In regard to the State of North Carolina, and the Commissioners <lb/>from said State to this
Congress.</head>
          <p>WHEREAS, The people of North Carolina and those of the States represented in this
Congress, have a common history, a common sympathy, a common honor, and a common
danger—and, whereas, it is the opinion and earnest desire of this Congress, that
the State of North Carolina should be united in government with these States.</p>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Be it therefore resolved</hi>, That this Congress receive with pleasure the Commissioners from
the State of North Carolina, and hope to pursue such a course of action as shall commend
itself to, and induce the State of North Carolina speedily to unite in our councils, and in
such Government as shall be formed by these States.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 8, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 5.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To continue in force certain laws of the United States of<lb/> America.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Be it enacted by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That all the
laws of the United States of America, in force and in use in the Confederate States of
America
<pb id="acts37" n="37"/>
on the first day of November last, and not inconsistent with the Constitution of the
Confederate States, be and the same are hereby continued in force until altered or repealed
by the Congress.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 9, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 6.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>In relation to the occupation of the Forts and Arsenals,  &amp;c.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Congress of the Confederate States of America</hi>, That this Government
takes under its charge the questions and difficulties now existing between the several
States of this Confederacy, and the Government of the United States of America, relating
to the occupation of forts, arsenals, navy yards, and other public establishments; and that
the President of the Congress be directed to communicate this resolution to the several
States of this Confederacy through the respective Governors thereof.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 12, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 9.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>Authorizing the Secretary of Congress to arrange for Publication<lb/> the Provisional
Constitution for the Government<lb/>of the Confederate States of America, with the
<sic corr="Autograph">Autogarph</sic><lb/> Signatures of Members of Congress, &amp;c.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That the Secretary
of the Congress be allowed to have engrossed and arranged for publication the Provisional
Constitution for the Government of the Confederate States of America, with the autograph
signatures of the members of Congress, and the flag and seal of the Confederacy, whenever
adopted.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 14, 1861.</dateline></closer>
        </div2>
        <pb id="acts38" n="38"/>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 11.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>To authorize the Judiciary Committee to have such matter<lb/> printed as they may desire to 
lay before the Congress.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That the Judiciary
Committee be authorized to have such matter printed as they may desire to lay before the
Congress.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 14, 1861.</dateline></closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 12] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To continue in office the Officers connected with the Collection<lb/> of the Customs in the
Confederate States of America.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">Be it enacted by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>,
That the several officers who, at the time of the adoption of the Constitution of the
Provisional Government of these States, held and exercised any office connected with the
collection of the customs, duties and imports in the several States of this Confederacy, or
as assistant treasurers entrusted with keeping the moneys arising therefrom, are hereby
appointed to the several offices which at the said date they respectively held; and they
shall have the same powers, be subject to the same duties, and be entitled to the same
salaries, fees and emoluments as are set forth and provided in and by the laws of the
United States of America, until the first day of April next: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That the maximum of
compensation which each collector shall receive from all sources shall not exceed the rate
of five thousand dollars per annum.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. Each collector so appointed, shall within two weeks from the date of this act,
execute to the Confederate States of America, a bond in the same amount and subject to a
like condition with his last bond to the United States of America, with sureties to be
approved by a judge of any superior or circuit court of the State where such collector is
located. And each of the other officers shall, within one week after the collector shall have
entered upon the discharge of his duties, execute to the Confederate States of
<pb id="acts39" n="39"/>
America, a bond in the same amount and subject to the like condition with his last bond to
the United States of America, in case he was required to execute a bond, with sureties to
be approved by the collectors of the port where such office is located.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. The said several officers shall take an oath before a magistrate, well and faithfully
to discharge the duties of his office, and to support the Constitution of the Provisional
Government of the Confederate States of America, which said oath shall be endorsed upon
the bond; and the bond shall be filed in the office of the Secretary of the Treasury, or in
such other place as he may direct.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 14, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 13.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>To continue in office the Officers of the Customs.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That until
otherwise provided, the several officers connected with the collection of the customs,
duties and imposts in the several States of this Confederacy, be and they are hereby
confirmed and continued as officers of the Government of the Confederate States of
America, with their present salaries and emoluments, until the first day of April next;
and that the Secretary of the Treasury be instructed to report to Congress a plan, to go
into effect at the said date, whereby the expenses of collecting the revenue at each
custom house shall be diminished at least fifty per cent.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 14, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 14.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>Giving certain powers to the Committee of Naval Affairs.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That the
committee on Naval Affairs be authorized to procure the attendance, at the seat of
Government, of all such persons versed in naval affairs as they may deem advisable to
consult with in the preparation of their report.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 14, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <pb id="acts40" n="40"/>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 15.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>To provide for Printing for the Committees of the Congress.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That
each of the Standing Committees of Congress is authorized to cause to be
printed any matters which it may deem requisite for the use of the committee.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 14, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 17.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>For the appointment of Commissioners to the Government <lb/>of the United
States of America.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That
it is the sense of this Congress, that a commission of three persons be
appointed by the President elect as early as may be convenient after his
inauguration, and sent to the Government of the United States of America,
for the purpose of negotiating friendly relations between that Government and
the Confederate States of America, and for the settlement of all questions of
disagreement between the two Governments upon principles of right, justice,
equity, and good faith.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 15, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 18.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>For the Enforcement of the Revenue Laws.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That
the President of Congress instruct the collectors of the several ports of this
Confederacy to enforce the existing revenue laws against all foreign countries,
except the State of Texas.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 16, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <pb id="acts41" n="41"/>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 19.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>For the relief of J. M. Walden, a citizen of Georgia.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Confederate States of America in Congress assembled</hi>, That
J. M. Walden, a citizen of the State of Georgia, be and he is hereby authorized
to file with the attorney-general, a caveat, accompanied by suitable drawings
and explanations, setting forth the design and purpose thereof, for the
protection and improvement claimed to have been made by him in railroad
switches, and that said caveat, when so filed as aforesaid, shall be effectual to
protect his rights to said invention, until a patent office shall have been
established: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That as soon as said office is established, said caveat
shall be filed with the commissioner thereof, and such proceedings had
thereon, as may be authorized by law.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 16, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 20.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To exempt from Duty certain commodities therein named, <lb/>and for other
purposes.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">Be it enacted by the Confederate States of America in Congress
assembled</hi>, That the following articles shall be exempt from duty and admitted
free into said States, to-wit: Bacon, pork, hams, lard, beef, fish of all kinds,
wheat, and flour of wheat, and flour of all other grains; Indian corn and meal;
barley and barley flour; rye and rye flour; oats and oat meal; gunpowder,
and all the materials of which it is made; lead in all forms; arms of every
description, and munitions of war and military accoutrements; percussion
caps; living animals of all kinds; also, all agricultural products in their natural
state.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That all goods, wares and merchandize
imported from any one of the late United States of America, not being now
a member of this Confederacy, into this Confederacy before the fourth day of
March next, which may have been <hi rend="italics">bona fide</hi> purchased heretofore, or within
ten days after the passage of this act, shall be exempt and free from duty.</p>
          <pb id="acts42" n="42"/>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the State of Texas be and is
hereby exempted from the operation of the tariff laws heretofore passed
and adopted by this Congress.</p>
          <closer>ADOPTED <dateline>February 18, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 21.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To Provide Munitions of War and for other purposes.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">Be it enacted by the Confederate States of America in Congress
assembled,</hi> That the President or Secretary of War, under his direction, is
hereby authorized and empowered to make contracts for the purchase and
manufacture of heavy ordnance and small arms; and of machinery for the
manufacture or alteration of small arms and munitions of war; and to
employ the necessary agents and artisans for these purposes; and to
make contracts for the establishment of powder mills and the manufacture
of powder; and the President is authorized to make contracts provided for
in this act, in such manner and on such terms as in his judgment the
public exigencies may require.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 20, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 22.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To authorize the President to appoint a Private Secretary.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">Be it enacted by the Confederate States of America in Congress
assembled, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same</hi>, That the
President of the Confederate States of America be, and he is hereby
authorized to appoint a private secretary, through whom he may
communicate with Congress, and who shall discharge such duties as may be
assigned him by the President, and shall receive such compensation for his
services as shall be fixed by law.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 20, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <pb id="acts43" n="43"/>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 23.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To determine the Salaries of the Vice President and of the<lb/> Heads of
Departments.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact,</hi> That the
annual compensation of the Vice President, and of the Secretaries of State,
of the Treasury, of War, of the Navy, the Postmaster General, and the
Attorney General, shall be at the rate of six thousand dollars, payable
quarterly, in advance.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 21, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 24.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To organize the Department of State.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact,</hi>
That there shall be an Executive Department to be denominated the
Department of State; and there shall be a principal officer therein to be
called the Secretary of State, who shall perform and execute such duties
as shall, from time to time, be enjoined on or entrusted to him by the
President of the Confederate States, agreeably to the Constitution,
relative to correspondences, commissions or instructions to or with
public ministers or consuls from the Confederate States, or to
negotiations with public ministers from Foreign States, or princes, or to
memorials or other applications from foreign public ministers, and other
foreigners, or to such other matters respecting foreign affairs as the
President of the Confederate States shall assign to the said department;
and furthermore the said principal officer shall conduct the business
of the said department in such manner as the President of the
Confederate States shall from time to time order or instruct. Said
Secretary shall be appointed by the President, by and with the
advice and consent of the Congress, and shall receive a compensation to be
ascertained and regulated by law.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, It shall be the duty of the Secretary of
State to keep and preserve all bills and resolutions
<pb id="acts44" n="44"/>
of the Congress having been approved or signed by the President or otherwise
become laws, and he shall carefully preserve the originals, and shall, as soon
as conveniently may be after he shall receive the same, cause every such law,
order and resolution to be published in at least three public newspapers,
published within the Confederate States, and shall also cause two printed
copies, duly authenticated, to be sent to the executive authority of each State.
It shall be the duty of the Secretary to keep the great seal of the Confederate
States, and to make out and record and affix said seal to all civil commissions
to officers of the Confederate States, to be appointed by the President, by and
with the advice of the Congress, or by the President alone: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That
said seal shall not be affixed to any commission before it is signed by the
President, nor to any other instrument or act without the special warrant of
the President, therefor. The said Secretary shall also cause a seal of office to
be made for said department, of such device as the President shall approve,
and all copies of records and papers in said office, authenticated under the
said seal, shall be evidence equally as the original record or paper.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That there shall be in the said department a
chief clerk to be appointed by the Secretary, and such other clerks as from
time to time may be found necessary, and authorized by the Congress, who
shall receive a compensation for their services to be fixed by law; and the
Secretary of State and every other person to be appointed or employed in said
department shall, before he enters on the execution of his office or
employment, take an oath or affirmation well and faithfully to execute the
trust committed to him.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, There shall be paid to the Secretary, for the use
of the Confederate States, the following fees of office by the persons
requiring the services to be performed, except when they are performed for
any officer of the Confederate States in a matter relating to the duties of his
office, to wit: for making out and authenticating copies of records, ten cents
for each hundred words; for authenticating a copy of a record or paper, under
the seal of office, one dollar.</p>
          <p>SEC. 5. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, This act shall be in force and take effect
from and after its passage.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 21, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <pb id="acts45" n="45"/>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 25.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To establish the Treasury Department.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That there shall be an executive department known as the Department of 
Treasury, in which shall be the following officers, namely: A Secretary of the
Treasury, to be deemed the head of the department; a Comptroller, an
Auditor, a Register, a Treasurer, and an Assistant to the Secretary of the
Treasury, which assistant shall be appointed by the said Secretary; all of which
officers shall receive such salaries respectively as may be provided by law.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That it shall be the duty of the Secretary of
the Treasury to superintend the collection of the public revenue; to digest and
prepare plans for the improvement and management thereof, and for the
support of the public credit; to prepare and report estimates of the public
revenue and the public expenditures; to decide on the forms of keeping and
stating accounts and making returns, and to grant, under the limitations herein
established or to be hereafter provided, all warrants for moneys to be paid into
the Treasury, and all warrants for moneys to be issued from the Treasury in
pursuance of appropriations by law: to execute such services relative to the
sale of the public property belonging to the Confederate States as by law
may be required of him; to make reports and give information to the Congress
or the President—in person or in writing, as may be required—concerning
all matters referred to him by the Congress or the President respectively, and
which shall appertain to his office; and generally to perform all such services
relative to the finances, and all such other duties, as he may by law be directed
to perform.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Secretary of the Treasury shall
have power to appoint a chief clerk, and also such other clerks, from time to
time, as he may deem necessary, and Congress may authorize by law, which
officers shall respectively receive such compensation as may be provided by
law.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Secretary of the Treasury shall
cause to be procured an official seal for the Department of Treasury, to be
approved by the President; and copies of all official papers or records in said
department, certified under the seal thereof, shall be received
<pb id="acts46" n="46"/>
in evidence in all the courts of the Confederate States, in lieu of such original
papers or records.</p>
          <p>SEC. 5. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That it shall be the duty of the Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury to examine all letters, contracts and warrants
prepared for the signatures of the Secretary of the Treasury, and perform all
such other duties as may be devolved on him by law or by the Secretary of the
Treasury.</p>
          <p>SEC. 6. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That it shall be the duty of the Comptroller
to superintend the adjustment and preservation of the public accounts; to
examine all accounts settled by the Auditor, and certify the balances arising
thereon to the Register; to countersign all warrants drawn by the Secretary of
the Treasury which shall be authorized by law; to report to the Secretary the
official forms of all papers to be issued in the different offices for collecting
the public revenue, and the manner and form of keeping and stating the
accounts of the several persons employed therein. He shall moreover provide
for the regular and punctual payment of all moneys which may be collected,
and shall direct prosecutions for all delinquencies of officers of the revenue,
and for debts that are or shall be due to the Confederate States.</p>
          <p>SEC. 7. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That it shall be the duty of the Auditor to
receive all public accounts, and after examination to certify the balance and
transmit the accounts, with the vouchers and certificate, to the comptroller for
his decision thereon: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That if any person whose account shall be so
audited be dissatisfied therewith, he may appeal to the comptroller against
such settlement.</p>
          <p>SEC. 8. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Auditor of the public accounts
shall be empowered to administer oaths or affirmations to witnesses in any
case in which he may deem it necessary or proper for the due examination of
the accounts with which he may be charged.</p>
          <p>SEC. 9. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That it shall be the duty of the Register to
keep all accounts of the receipts and expenditures of the public money, and of
all debts due to or from the Confederate States; to receive from the
comptroller the accounts which shall have been finally adjusted, and to
preserve such accounts, with their vouchers and certificates; to record all
warrants for the receipt or payment of moneys at the treasury, certify the
same thereon, and to transmit to the Secretary of the Treasury copies of
the
<pb id="acts47" n="47"/>
certificates of balances of accounts adjusted as herein directed.</p>
          <p>SEC. 10. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That it shall be the duty of the
treasurer to receive and keep the moneys of the Confederate States, and to
disburse the same upon warrants drawn by the secretary of the treasury,
countersigned by the comptroller, and recorded by the register, and not
otherwise; he shall take receipts for all moneys paid by him, and all receipts
for moneys received by him shall be endorsed upon warrants signed by the
secretary of the treasury, without which warrant, so signed, no
acknowledgment for money received into the public treasury shall be valid.
And the said treasurer shall render his accounts to the comptroller quarterly,
or oftener if required, and shall transmit a copy thereof, when settled, to the
secretary of the treasury. He shall, at all times, submit to the Secretary of the
Treasury and the Comptroller, or either of them, the inspection of the books
and records in his office, and of all moneys in his hands; and shall, prior to
entering upon the duties of his office, give bond, with good and sufficient
sureties, to be approved by the Secretary of the Treasury and Comptroller,
in the sum of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, payable to the
Confederate States of America, with condition for the faithful performance of
the duties of his office, and for the fidelity of the persons to be by him
employed, which bond shall be lodged in the office of the Comptroller.</p>
          <p>SEC. 11. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That no person appointed to any office
instituted by this act, shall directly or indirectly be concerned or interested as
owner in whole or in part of any sea vessel, or purchase by himself, or another
in trust for him, any public property or forfeited goods, or be concerned in the
purchase by himself, or another in trust for him, any public property or
forfeited goods, or be concerned in the purchase or disposal of any public
securities of any State or of the Confederate States, or take or apply to his
own use any emolument or gain for negotiating or transacting any business in
the said department, other than what shall be allowed by law; and if any
person shall offend against any of the prohibitions of this act, he shall be guilty
of a high misdemeanor, and forfeit to the Confederate States the penalty of
three thousand dollars, and shall upon conviction be removed from office, and forever
thereafter be incapable of holding any office under the Confederate States:
<hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That if any other person than a public prosecutor
<pb id="acts48" n="48"/>
shall give information of any such offence, upon which a prosecution and
conviction shall be had, one-half of the aforesaid penalty of three thousand
dollars, when recovered shall be for the use of the person giving such
information.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 21, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 26.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To establish the War Department.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>, 
That an Executive Department be and the same is hereby established, under
the name of the War Department, the chief officer of which shall be called the
Secretary of War.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That said Secretary shall, under the direction
and control of the President, have charge of all matters and things connected
with the army, and with the Indian tribes within the limits of the Confederacy,
and shall perform such duties appertaining to the army, and to said Indian
tribes, as may from time to time be assigned to him by the President.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Secretary of said department is
hereby authorized to appoint a chief clerk thereof, and as many inferior clerks
as may be found necessary, and may be authorized by law.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 21, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 27.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To establish the Navy Department.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That an Executive Department be and the same is hereby established to be
called the Navy Department.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That the chief officer of said department shall
be called the Secretary of the Navy, and shall, under the direction and control
of the President, have
<pb id="acts49" n="49"/>
charge of all matters and things connected with the Navy of the Confederacy,
and shall perform all such duties appertaining to the Navy as shall from time
to time be assigned to him by the President.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That said Secretary shall be authorized to
appoint a chief clerk, and such other clerks as may be found necessary, and
be authorized by law.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 21, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 28.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To establish the Post Office Department.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>, That there shall
be an executive department, to be denominated the Post Office Department,
and there shall be a principal officer therein, to be called the Postmaster
General, who shall perform such duties in relation to post offices and post
routes, as shall be enjoined on him by the President of the Confederate States,
agreeably to the Constitution and the laws of the land, who shall be paid an
annual salary to be fixed by law, and have power to appoint a chief clerk, and
such inferior clerks as may be found necessary, who shall receive such
compensation as may be fixed by law.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 21, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No 29.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To organize and establish an Executive Department, to be<lb/> known as the 
Department of Justice.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That from and after the passage of this act, there shall be an executive
department to be known as the Department of Justice. The principal officer
at the head of said department shall be denominated the Attorney General,
who shall be paid an annual salary to be fixed by law, and who shall have the
power to appoint a clerk, at such compensation as may be fixed by law.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. It shall be the duty of the Attorney General to prosecute and conduct
all suits in the Supreme Court, in which the Confederate States shall be
concerned, and to give
<pb id="acts50" n="50"/>
his advice and opinion upon questions of law, when required by the President
of the Confederate States, or when requested by any of the heads of
departments, touching any matters that may concern their departments on
subjects before them. He shall also have supervisory power over the accounts
of the marshals, clerks, and officers of all the courts of the Confederate States,
and all claims against the Confederate States.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 21, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 30.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To prescribe the Rates of Postage in the Confederate States<lb/> of America, and
for other purposes.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That from and after such period as the Postmaster General may by
proclamation announce, there shall be charged the following rates of postage,
to wit: For every single sealed letter, and for every letter in manuscript or
paper of any kind, upon which information shall be asked for or communicated
in writing or by marks or signs, conveyed in the mail for any distance between
places within the Confederate States of America, not exceeding five hundred
miles, five cents; and for any distance exceeding five hundred miles double that
rate; and every letter or parcel not exceeding half an ounce in weight shall be
deemed a single letter, and every additional weight of half an ounce, or
additional weight of less than half an ounce, shall be charged with an
additional single postage; and all packages containing other than printed or
written matter—and money packages are included in this class—shall be
rated by weight as letters are rated, and shall be charged double the rates of
postage on letters; and all drop letters, or letters placed in any post office not
for transmission but for delivery only, shall be charged with postage at the
rate of two cents each; and in all the foregoing cases the postage must be
pre-paid by stamps; and all letters which shall hereafter be advertised as
remaining over or uncalled for in any post office shall be charged with two
cents each in addition to the regular postage, both to be accounted for as
other postages of this Confederacy.</p>
          <pb id="acts51" n="51"/>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That all newspapers not exceeding three
ounces in weight sent from the office of publication to actual and <hi rend="italics">bona fide</hi>
subscribers, shall be charged with postage as follows, to wit: The postage on
the regular numbers of a newspaper published weekly, within the State where
published, shall be six and one-half cents per quarter; and papers published
semi-weekly, double that rate; and papers published thrice a week, treble that
rate; and papers published daily, six times that rate; and the postage on all
newspapers to actual subscribers without the State where published shall be
charged double the foregoing rates. And periodicals sent from the office of 
publication to actual <hi rend="italics">bona fide</hi> subscribers shall be charged with postage as
follows, to wit: The postage on the regular numbers of a periodical not
exceeding one and a half ounces in weight, and published monthly, within the
State where published, shall be three cents per quarter; if published
semi-monthly, double that rate; and for every additional ounce or fraction of
an ounce, double the foregoing rates shall be charged; and periodicals
published quarterly or bi-monthly shall be charged one cent an ounce; and
the postage on all periodicals without the State where published shall be
double the specified rates; and regular subscribers to newspapers and
periodicals shall be required to pay one quarter's postage in advance. And
there shall be charged upon every other newspaper, and each circular not
sealed, hand bill, engraving, pamphlet, periodical and magazine, which shall
be unconnected with any manuscript or written matter, not exceeding three
ounces in weight, two cents; and for each additional ounce or fraction of an
ounce, two cents additional; and in all cases the postage shall be pre-paid by
stamps. And books, bound or unbound, not weighing four pounds shall be
deemed mailable matter, and shall be charged with postage to be pre-paid
by stamps, at two cents an ounce for any distance. The publishers of
newspapers or periodicals may send to each other, from their respective
offices of publication, free of postage, one copy of each publication.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That it shall be the duty of the Postmaster
General to provide and furnish to all deputy postmasters, and to all other
persons applying and paying therefor, suitable postage stamps and stamped
envelopes, of the denomination of two cents, five cents, and twenty cents, to
facilitate the pre-payment of postages
<pb id="acts52" n="52"/>
provided for in this act; and any person who shall forge or counterfeit any
postage stamp provided or furnished under the provisions of this or any
former act, whether the same are impressed or printed on or attached to
envelopes or not, or any die, plate, or engraving therefor, or shall make
or print, or knowingly use or sell, or have in his possession with intent to use
or sell, any such false, forged, or counterfeited die, plate, engraving, or
postage stamp, or who shall make or print, or authorize or procure to be
made or printed, any postage stamps of the kind provided and furnished by the
Postmaster General as aforesaid, without the especial authority and direction
of the Post Office Department, or who, after such postage stamps have been
printed, shall, with intent to defraud the revenues of the Post Office
Department, deliver any postage stamps to any <sic corr="person">peson</sic> or persons other than
such as shall be authorized to receive the same by an instrument of
writing, duly executed under the hand of the Postmaster General and the seal
of the Post Office Department, shall, on conviction thereof, be deemed guilty
of felony, and be punished by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars, or by
imprisonment not exceeding five years, or by both such fine and imprisonment;
and the expenses of procuring and providing all such postage stamps and
letter envelopes as are provided for or authorized by this act, shall be paid,
after being adjusted by the Auditor of the Post Office Department, on the
certificate of the Postmaster General out of any money in the treasury arising
from the revenues of the Post Office Department.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That it shall be the duty of every
postmaster to cause to be defaced, in such manner as the Postmaster General
shall direct, all postage stamps of this Confederacy attached to letters
deposited in his office for delivery, or to be sent by mail; and if any postmaster
sending letters in the mail with such postage stamps attached shall omit to
deface the same it shall be the duty of the postmaster to whose office such
letters shall be sent for delivery to deface the stamps and report the delinquent
postmaster to the Postmaster General. And if any person shall use or attempt
to use in pre-payment of postage any postage stamps which shall have been
before used for like purposes, such person shall be subject to a penalty of fifty
dollars for every such offence, to be recovered in the name of the Confederate
States of America in any court of competent jurisdiction.</p>
          <pb id="acts53" n="53"/>
          <p>SEC. 5. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That from and after the day when this
act goes into effect the franking privilege shall be abolished; <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, that
the Postmaster General and his chief clerks and Auditor of the Treasury
for the Post Office Department shall be and they are hereby authorized to
transmit through the mail, free of postage, any letters, packages, or other
matters relating exclusively to their official duties or to the business of the
Post Office Department; but they shall, in every such case, indorse on the
back of the letter or package to be sent free of postage, over their own
signature, the words “Official Business.” And for any such indorsement
falsely made, the person so offending shall forfeit and pay three hundred
dollars. <hi rend="italics">And provided further</hi>, The several deputy postmasters throughout
the Confederate States shall be and hereby are authorized to send through
the mail, free of postage, all letters and packages which it may be their
duty or they may have occasion to transmit to any person or place, and
which shall relate exclusively to the business of their respective offices or
to the business of the Post Office Department; but in every such case the
deputy postmaster sending any such letter or package shall indorse
thereon, over his own signature, the words “Post Office Business.”
And for any and every such indorsement falsely made, the person making
the same shall forfeit and pay three hundred dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 6. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the third section of an act entitled
“An act further to amend an act entitled ‘An act to reduce and modify the
rates of postage in the United States, and for other purposes, passed
March third, eighteen hundred and fifty-one,’ ” approved March 3d, 1855,
whereby the letter registration system was established, be and is hereby
repealed from and after the day when this act goes into effect.</p>
          <p>SEC. 7. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That no letters shall be carried by the
express or other chartered companies, unless the same shall be pre-paid
by being enclosed in a stamped envelope of this Confederacy; and any
company violating the provisions of this act shall forfeit and pay the sum
of five hundred dollars for each offence, to be recovered by action of
debt in any court of this Confederacy having cognizance thereof, in the
name and for the use of this Confederacy.</p>
          <p>SEC. 8. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That the Postmaster General of the
Confederate States be and is hereby authorized to
<pb id="acts54" n="54"/>
make all necessary arrangements for the transmission of mails between the
territories of this and other governments, subject to the approval of the
President, until postal treaties can be effected.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <date><sic corr="February">Februay</sic> 23, 1861.</date></closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 31.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>For the Relief of William P. Barker.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That William P. Barker, a citizen of the State of Alabama, be authorized to
file in the office of the Attorney General, a specification of an invention
claimed to have been made by him, as an improvement in the mode of casting
ordnance, and that the same shall, from this date, operate as a caveat, to
protect his said invention until an application can be made for a patent
according to law.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 25, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 32.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head><hi rend="italics">To provide an Executive Mansion</hi>.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do resolve</hi>, That the
committee to arrange for government buildings be authorized to lease a
furnished mansion for the residence of the President of the Confederate States.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 25, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 33.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>In relation to Public Printing.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That the Secretary of Congress shall, after each session, prepare for
publication fair copies of all the acts
<pb id="acts55" n="55"/>
passed by Congress, and resolutions of a public nature intended to have the
effect of laws, together with the Constitutions for a Provisional and
Permanent Government of this Confederacy, adopted by this Congress.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. The acts shall be arranged under appropriate titles, shall have
marginal notes to each section, and be fully indexed.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. The Secretary shall also prepare for publication copies of the public
journal of the proceedings of this Congress, and a full index for the same.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. The acts and journals, when prepared, shall be delivered to the public
printers, who shall, without delay, publish three thousand copies of each, in a
style equal in execution, and upon paper of the same quality in every respect,
as the laws of the United States, as annually published by Messrs. Little &amp;
Brown.</p>
          <p>SEC. 5. The acts of Congress thus published shall be bound by the public
printers in a style not inferior to the acts of the General Assembly of the State
of Alabama, for which service he shall receive the sum of twenty-five cents
per copy.</p>
          <p>SEC. 6. The public printers shall be entitled to receive as compensation for
the publication of the laws and journal the following prices, viz :</p>
          <p>For each page of the laws and journals, including press-work, paper, pressing,
folding and stitching, the sum of six dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 7. For all job printing ordered by Congress the public printers shall
receive the following compensation and no more, viz</p>
          <p>First: For bills, resolutions, and reports—For composition per page
(foolscap) one dollar and seventy-five cents; for press-work, folding and
stitching one hundred copies, twenty-five cents per page, and <hi rend="italics">pro rata</hi> for all
copies over one hundred.</p>
          <p>Second: For rules, constitutions and other pamphlets—For composition,
per page, (octavo) in small pica, plain, one dollar; in small pica, rule, one
dollar and fifty cents; for brevier, rule, two dollars; for rule and figure work on
page larger than royal octavo, per 1000 ems, one dollar: for press-work,
including folding and stitching, per token, seventy cents.</p>
          <p>Third: For yeas and nays, circular letters, and other miscellaneous printing
ordered by Congress—For composition, plain work, per 1000 ems, seventy
cents; rule and
<pb id="acts56" n="56"/>
figure work per 1000 ems, one dollar; for press-work, including folding and
stitching, per token or fraction of token, seventy-cents.</p>
          <p>Fourth: For all paper on which printing is done for Congress, the public
printer shall be allowed the fair market cost thereof, and twenty per centum
additional thereto.</p>
          <p>Fifth: On all work done for Congress when in secret session, the public printer
shall receive an additional compensation of ten per centum on the above rates.</p>
          <p>SEC. 8. The chief officers of the Executive Departments of the Government
are hereby authorized to contract for all necessary printing in connection with
their several offices, in no case, however, at higher rates of compensation than
hereinbefore prescribed for work done for Congress.</p>
          <p>SEC. 9. The Postmaster General shall contract for the publication of all post
bills and other blanks connected with his office, not exceeding the following
rates: For composition, including rule and figure work per 1000 ems, fifty
cents; for press-work, per clean token, (the sheets not to be less than 16
by 26 inches,) fifty cents; for paper, ten per cent. on actual cost. Nothing shall
be allowed for altering the name of a postmaster on a post bill or other blank,
nor shall there be an additional charge for composition when the name of the
post-office alone is changed. But the printer shall be required to keep always
on hand, forms for post-office blanks, and when new orders are given, the
charge shall be made only for the press-work and paper, and such new
composition as may be necessary.</p>
          <p>SEC. 10. All accounts for printing done for Congress or any one of the
Executive Departments shall, before the same are allowed and paid, be sworn
to by the public printer or contractor; shall be accompanied by vouchers,
showing the cost of the paper used and the quantity thereof, and shall be
certified to be correctly made out under the law by at least two disinterested
practical printers in no way connected with the office or business of the
claimant.</p>
          <p>SEC. 11. The foregoing rates and provisions do not apply to advertisements
in public gazettes by order of any of the Executive Departments, for which the
usual fees paid by other advertisers shall be allowed. But no advertisement
from any of the Executive Departments shall be inserted in more than three
public gazettes in the same State.</p>
          <p>SEC. 12. When printing on parchment is required to be done for an Executive
Department, the parchment shall be
<pb id="acts57" n="57"/>
purchased and furnished by such department, and a special contract made for
such printing, not exceeding ten dollars per thousand copies.</p>
          <p>SEC. 13. There shall be connected with the Department of Justice, a Bureau
of Printing, the chief officer of which shall be appointed by the President, by
and with the advice and consent of the Congress, and shall be known as the
Superintendent of Public Printing. No person shall be eligible to this office
who is not skilled in and acquainted with the practical details of the business
of printing; nor shall the Superintendent of Public Printing be in any manner,
directly or indirectly interested in the contracts for public printing, nor with
the printing office at which the same is done, nor connected with any
newspaper in any capacity whatever.</p>
          <p>SEC. 14. It shall be the duty of the Superintendent to supervise, direct and
control all the printing done by order of Congress, or under contract with any
Executive Department, as to the quality of paper to be used, the character of
type, the style of binding, and the general execution of the work; and also as
to the time and order in which the same shall be completed. It shall be his duty
also to report to the head of the department, at least once a year, the condition
of the public printing, stating the amount paid out for the same on each
contract, specifying the amount paid out under the order of each department,
and giving estimates of the probable expenditure for the succeeding year;
which report shall be laid before the Congress by the President, in connection
with his annual message. It shall be his duty also to take from every contractor
for public printing such bond, with good security as he may require, not
exceeding the probable amount of the contract price for the printing to be
done by such contractor, and conditioned for the faithful performance of his
contract in every particular. Such bonds shall be renewed annually by
contractors whose work shall be continuing in its character and extends
beyond the year of its commencement.</p>
          <p>SEC. 15. All accounts for printing done, when rendered as hereinbefore
provided, shall be audited and allowed by the Superintendent of Public
Printing before the same shall be paid. If the Superintendent shall refuse to
receive any work done, or shall refuse to allow any account rendered, the
printer or contractor may appeal from such decision to the head of the
department, whose decision, on the appeal, shall be final and conclusive.</p>
          <pb id="acts58" n="58"/>
          <p>SEC. 16. All laws or parts of laws militating against the provisions of this act
are hereby repealed.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 27, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 34.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To declare and establish the Free Navigation of the Mississippi<lb/> River.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That the peaceful navigation of the Mississippi River is hereby declared free to
the citizens of any of the States upon its borders, or upon the borders of its
navigable tributaries; and all ships, boats, rafts or vessels may navigate the
same, under such regulations as may be established by authority of law, or
under such police regulations as may be established by the States within their
several jurisdictions.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, All ships, boats or vessels which may enter the
waters of the said river within the limits of this Confederacy, from any port or
place beyond the said said limits, may freely pass with their cargoes to any
other port or place beyond the limits of this Confederacy without any duty or
hindrance, except light-money, pilotage, and other like charges: but it shall
not be lawful for any such ship, boat or vessel to sell, deliver, or in any way
dispose of any part of her cargo, or land any portion thereof for the purpose
of sale and delivery within the limits of this Confederacy; and in case any
portion of such cargo shall be sold or delivered, or landed for that purpose in
violation of the provisions of this act, the same shall be forfeited, and shall be
seized and condemned by a proceeding in admiralty, before the court having
jurisdiction of the same in the district in which the same may be found; and
the ship, boat or vessel shall forfeit four times the amount of the value of the
duties chargeable on the said goods, wares or <sic>merchandise</sic>  so landed, sold or
disposed of in violation of the provisions of this act, to be recovered by a
proper proceeding in admiralty before the said court, in the district in which
such ship, boat, or vessel may be found, one-half for the use of the collector
of the district, who shall institute and conduct such proceeding, the other half
for the use of the Government of the Confederate
<pb id="acts59" n="59"/>
States: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That if any such ship, boat or vessel shall be stranded, or
front any cause become unable to proceed on its voyage, the cargo thereof
may be landed and the same be entered at the nearest port of entry, in the
same manner as goods, wares and merchandise  regularly consigned to said 
port; and the person so entering the same shall be entitled to the benefit of
drawback of duties or of warehousing said goods, wares and merchandise 
as provided by law in other cases.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, If any person having the charge of or being
concerned in the transportation of any goods, wares or merchandize upon the
said river, shall, with intent to defraud the revenue, break open or unpack,
within the limits of the Confederate States, any part of the merchandize
entered for transportation beyond the said limits, or shall exchange or
consume the same, or with like intent shall break or deface any seal or
fastening placed thereon by any officer of the revenue, or if any person shall
deface, alter or forge any certificate granted for the protection of merchandize
transported as aforesaid, each and every person so offending shall forfeit and
pay five hundred dollars, and shall be imprisoned not less than one or more
than six months, at the discretion of the court before which such person shall
be convicted.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, In case any ship, boat or vessel shall enter the
waters of the said river within the limits of the Confederate States, having on
board any goods, wares or merchandize subject to the payment of duties, and
the master, consignee or owner shall desire to land the same for sale or
otherwise, it shall be lawful to enter said goods, wares and merchandize at any
port of entry, in the same manner as goods, wares or merchandize regularly
consigned to the said port, or to forward them under bond or seal, according
to the regulations customary in such cases, when consigned to any port or
place beyond the limits of this Confederacy, and on payment of the duties on
said goods, to obtain from the collector a license to land the same at any point
on the river; and when goods, wares or merchandize shall be entered as
aforesaid, the owner, importer or consignee shall be entitled to the benefit of
drawback of duties or of warehousing the said goods, wares and merchandize,
as is provided by law, upon complying with all the laws and regulations which
apply to cases of entry for drawback or warehousing respectively. </p>
          <pb id="acts60" n="60"/>
          <p>SEC. 5. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, When any such ship, boat or vessel, having on
board goods, wares and merchandize subject to the payment of duties, as set
forth in the fourth section, shall arrive at the first port of her entry of
Confederate States, the master or person in command of such ship, boat or
vessel shall, before he pass the said port, and immediately after his arrival,
deposit with the collector a manifest of the cargo on board subject to the
payment of duties, and the said collector shall, after registering the same,
transmit it, duly certified to have been deposited, to the officers with whom
the entries are to be made, and the said collector may, if he judge it necessary
for the security of the revenue, put an inspector of the customs on board any
such ship, boat or vessel, to accompany the same until her arrival at the first
port of entry to which her cargo may be consigned; and if the master or person
in command shall omit to deposit a manifest as aforesaid, or refuse to receive
such inspector on board, he shall forfeit and pay five hundred dollars, with
costs of suit, one-half to the use of the officer with whom the manifest should
have been deposited, and the other half to the use of the collector of the
district to which the vessel was bound: <hi rend="italics">Provided, however</hi>, That until ports of
entry shall be established above the city of Vicksburg, on the Mississippi River,
the penalties of this act shall not extend to the delivery of goods above that
port by vessels or boats descending said river.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 25, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 35.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To modify the Navigation Laws and repeal all Discriminating <lb/>Duties on Ships
or Vessels.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That all laws which forbid the employment in the coasting trade of ships or
vessels not enrolled or licensed, and also all laws which forbid the importation
of goods, wares or merchandize from one port of the Confederate States, to
another port of the Confederate States, or from any foreign port or place, in
a vessel belonging wholly or in part to a subject or citizen of any foreign State
or power, are hereby repealed.</p>
          <pb id="acts61" n="61"/>
          <p>SEC. 2. All laws which impose any discriminating duty on the tonnage of ships
or vessels owned by any subject or citizen of any foreign State or power, or
upon goods, wares or merchandize imported in any such ship or vessel, are
hereby repealed.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 26,1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 36.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To define more accurately the exemption of certain Goods <lb/>from Duty.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>, That the
exemption from duties allowed by the act to “Exempt from duties certain
commodities therein named, and for other purposes,” passed on the eighteenth
day of February, 1861, shall extend only to such goods, <hi rend="italics">bona fide</hi> purchased
on or before the twenty-eighth day of February instant, as shall have been
actually laden on board of the exporting vessel or conveyance destined for
any port in this Confederacy, on or before the fifteenth day of March, in the
present year.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 26, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 37.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>For the Establishment and Organization of a General Staff <lb/>for the Army of
the Confederate States of America.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That from and after the passage of this act, the general staff of the army of the
Confederate States shall consist of an Adjutant and Inspector General's
Department, Quartermaster General's Department, Subsistence Department,
and the Medical Department.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That the Adjutant and Inspector General's
Department shall consist of one Adjutant and Inspector General with the
rank of Colonel, four
<pb id="acts62" n="62"/>
Assistant Adjutants General with the rank of Major, and four Assistant Adjutants
General with the rank of Captain.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That the Quartermaster General's Department shall
consist of one Quartermaster General with the rank of Colonel, six Quartermasters
with the rank of major; and as many Assistant Quartermasters as may from time to
time be required by the service may be detailed by the War Department from the
subalterns of the line, who, in addition to their pay in the line, shall receive twenty
dollars per month while engaged in that service. The Quartermasters herein provided
for shall also discharge the duties of Paymasters, under such regulations as may be
prescribed by the Secretary of War.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That the Commissary General's Department shall consist
of one Commissary General with the rank of Colonel, four Commissaries with the rank
of Captain; and as many Assistant Commissaries as may from time to time be required
by the service may be detailed by the War Department from the subalterns of the line,
who, in addition to their pay in the line, shall receive twenty dollars per month while
engaged in that service. The Assistant Quartermasters and Assistant Commissaries shall
be subject to duties in both departments at the same time, but shall not receive the
additional compensation but in one department.</p>
          <p>SEC. 5. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Medical Department shall consist of one
Surgeon General with the rank of Colonel, four Surgeons with the rank of Major, and
six Assistant Surgeons with the rank of Captain; and as many Assistant Surgeons as
the service may require may be employed by the Department of War, and receive the
pay of Assistant Surgeons.</p>
          <p>SEC. 6. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That the officers of the Adjutant General's, Quartermaster
General's and Commissary General's Department, though eligible to command, according
to the rank they hold in the army of the Confederate States of America, shall not assume
command of troops, unless put on duty under orders which specially so direct by authority
of the President. The officers of the Medical Department shall not exercise command
except in their own department.</p>
          <p>SEC. 7. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That the staff officers herein provided for shall be appointed
by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Congress, and shall receive
<pb id="acts63" n="63"/>
such pay and allowances as shall be hereafter established by law.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 26, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 38.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To authorize the Secretary of the Treasury to establish additional<lb/> Ports and places of
Entry and Delivery, and appoint<lb/> Officers therefor.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>, That the
Secretary of the Treasury be and he is hereby authorized and empowered to establish
such ports of entry and delivery of goods, wares and merchandize as in his judgment
may be necessary for the proper collection of the customs and the enforcement of the
revenue laws of the Confederate States; and that he have power to change, alter and
abolish such ports and places of entry and delivery at any time when the public
interests may require it.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Secretary of the Treasury be and he is hereby
authorized and empowered to appoint suitable persons as collectors of the customs at such
ports and places of entry and delivery, under such regulations and with such salaries as he
may from time to time prescribe and establish.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 28, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 40.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To authorize the Secretary of State to appoint an Assistant.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>, That the Secretary of State
be and he is hereby authorized and empowered to appoint an assistant, who shall be
known as the Assistant Secretary of State, who shall perform such duties as may be
assigned him by the Secretary, and receive such compensation for his services as may be
fixed by law.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED<dateline> February 27, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <pb id="acts64" n="64"/>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 41.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To raise Money for the support of the Government, and to<lb/> provide for the Defence of the
Confederate States of <lb/>America.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>, That the
President of the Confederate States be and he is hereby authorized, at any time within
twelve months after the passage of this act, to borrow, on the credit of the Confederate
States, a sum not exceeding fifteen millions of dollars, or so much thereof as in his opinion
the exigencies of the public service may require, to be applied to the payment of
appropriations made by law for the support of the Government and for the defences of the
Confederate States.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. The Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized, by the consent of the President
of the Confederate States, to cause to be prepared certificates of stock or bonds, in such sums
as are hereinafter mentioned, for the amount to be borrowed as aforesaid, to be signed by the
Register of the Treasury and sealed with the seal of the Treasury; and the said certificates of
stock or bonds shall be made payable at the expiration of ten years from the first day of
September next; and the interest thereon shall be paid semi-annually, at the rate of eight per
cent. per annum, at the Treasury and such other place as the Secretary of the Treasury
may designate. And to the bonds which shall be issued as aforesaid shall be attached coupons
for the semi-annual interest which shall accrue, which coupons may be signed by officers
to be appointed for the purpose by the Secretary of the Treasury. And the faith of the
Confederate States is hereby pledged for the due payment of the principal and interest of the
said stock and bonds.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. At the expiration of five years from the first day of September next, the Confederate
States may pay up any portion of the bonds or stocks, upon giving three months <hi rend="italics">previous
public</hi> notice, at the seat of Government, of the particular stocks or bonds to be paid, and the
time and place of payment; and from and after the time so appointed, no further interest shall
be paid on said stock or bonds.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. The certificates of stock and bonds shall be issued in such form and for such amounts
as may be determined by the Secretary of the Treasury, and may be assigned or
<pb id="acts65" n="65"/>
delivered under such regulations as he may establish. But none of them shall be for a less
sum than fifty dollars, and he shall report to Congress, at its next session, a statement
in detail of his proceedings, and the rate at which the loans may have been made, and all
the expenses attending the same.</p>
          <p>SEC. 5. From and after the first day of August 1861, there shall be levied and collected
and paid a duty of one-eighth of one cent. per pound on all cotton in the raw state exported
from the Confederate States, which duty is hereby specially pledged to the due payment of
interest and principal of the loan provided for in this act; and the Secretary of the Treasury
is hereby authorized and required to establish a sinking fund to carry into effect the
provisions of this section: <hi rend="italics">Provided, however</hi>, That the interest coupons, issued under the
second section of this act, when due, shall be receivable in payment of the export duty on
cotton: <hi rend="italics">Provided, also</hi>, That when the debt and interest thereon herein authorized to be
contracted shall be extinguished, or the sinking fund provided for that purpose shall be
adequate to that end, the said export duty shall cease and determine.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 28, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 42.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>Supplemental to an act to regulate the Rates of Postage<lb/> and for other purposes.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1.<hi rend="italics"> The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>, That until
postage stamps and stamped envelopes can be procured and distributed, the Postmaster
General may order the postage of the Confederacy to be prepaid in money, under such rules
and regulations as he may adopt.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That until otherwise provided by law, the Postmaster General
may contract with any line of steamers for the transportation of mail matter between the ports
of this Confederacy and the ports of foreign governments: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That the rates of postage
shall not exceed the rates allowed by the present laws of the United
<pb id="acts66" n="66"/>
States for similar service, and the compensation to be paid shall not exceed the income from
postage on such matter.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 1, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 43.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To raise Provisional Forces for the Confederate States of<lb/> America, and for other purposes.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>, That to enable
the Government of the Confederate States to maintain its jurisdiction over all questions of
peace and war, and to provide for the public defence, the President be and he is hereby
authorized and directed to assume control of all military operations in every State, having
reference to or connection with questions between said States, or any of them, and powers
foreign to them.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That the President is hereby authorized to receive from the
several States the arms and munitions of war which have been acquired from the United
States, and which are now in the forts, arsenals and navy yards of said States, and all other
arms and munitions which they may desire to turn over and make chargeable to this
government.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the President be authorized to receive into the
service of this Government such forces now in the service of said States as may be tendered,
or who may volunteer, by consent of their State, in such numbers as he may require, for any
time not less than twelve months, unless sooner discharged.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That such forces may be received, with their officers, by
companies, battalions or regiments, and when so received shall form a part of the Provisional
Army of the Confederate States, according to the terms of their enlistment; and the President
shall appoint, by and with the advice and consent of Congress, such general officer or
officers for said forces as may be necessary for the service.</p>
          <p>SEC. 5. <hi rend="italics">Be it further enacted</hi>, That said forces, when received into the service of this
Government, shall have the same pay and allowances as may be provided by law for
<pb id="acts67" n="67"/>
volunteers entering the service, or for the army of the Confederate States, and shall be subject
to the same rules and government.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>February 28, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 44.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To admit Texas as a member of the Confederate States of <lb/>America.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>, That the State of Texas be
and is hereby admitted as a member of this Confederacy, upon an equal footing with the
other Confederate States.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 2, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 45.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>In relation to Patents and Caveats.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Congress of the Confederate States of America</hi>, That all persons, being
citizens of the Confederate States, who may wish to procure patents or file caveats for
inventions and useful discoveries and improvements, may file in the office of the Attorney
General a specification of such invention, discovery or improvement, together with such
descriptive drawings as may be necessary; and such specification, when so filed, shall
operate as a caveat to protect the rights of such persons, until regular application can be made
according to law; and this resolution shall apply to all patents heretofore granted by the
United States to citizens of this Confederacy, and to caveats heretofore filed by such citizens
in the Patent Office of the United States, on such patents and copies of such caveats being
deposited as aforesaid, in the office of the Attorney General: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That such applicants
shall pay such fees as may hereafter
<pb id="acts68" n="68"/>
be required by law establishing a patent office, on application for patents and
filing of caveats.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 4, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 48.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To provide for the Public Defence.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That in order to provide speedily forces to repel invasion, maintain the rightful possession of the Confederate States of America in every portion of territory belonging
to each State, and to secure the public tranquility and independence against threatened assault, the President be and he is hereby authorized to employ the militia,
military and naval forces of the Confederate States of America, and to ask for
and accept the services of any number of volunteers, not exceeding one
hundred thousand, who may offer their services, either as cavalry, mounted
riflemen, artillery or infantry, in such proportion of these several arms as he 
may deem expedient, to serve for twelve months after they shall be mustered
into service, unless sooner discharged.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the militia, when called into service
by virtue of this act or any other act, if in the opinion of the President the
public interest requires, may be compelled to serve for a term not exceeding
six months after they shall be mustered into service, unless sooner discharged.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That said volunteers shall furnish their own
clothes, and, if mounted men, their own horses and horse equipments; and
when mustered into service, shall be armed by the States from which they
come, or by the Confederate States of America.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That said volunteers shall, when called into
actual service, and while remaining therein, be subject to the rules and articles
of war, and instead of clothing, every non-commissioned officer and private in
any company shall be entitled, when called into actual service, to money in a
sum equal to the cost of clothing of a non-commissioned officer or private in
the regular army of the Confederate States of America.</p>
          <pb id="acts69" n="69"/>
          <p>SEC. 5. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the said volunteers so offering their
services may be accepted by the President in companies, squadrons, battalions
and regiments, whose officers shall be appointed in the manner prescribed by
law in the several States to which they shall respectively belong; but when
inspected, mustered, and received into the service of the Confederate States,
said troops shall be regarded in all respects as a part of the army of said
Confederate States, according to the terms of their respective enlistments.</p>
          <p>SEC. 6. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the President is hereby authorized to
organize companies so tendering their services into battalions or squadrons, 
battalions or squadrons into regiments, regiments into brigades, and brigades
into divisions, whenever in his judgment such organization may be expedient;
and whenever brigades or divisions shall be organized, the President shall
appoint the commanding officers for such brigades and divisions, subject to
the confirmation of Congress, who shall hold their offices only while such
brigades and divisions are in service; and the President shall, if necessary,
apportion the staff and general officers among the respective States from
which the volunteers shall tender their services, as he may deem proper.</p>
          <p>SEC. 7. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That whenever the militia or volunteers are
called and received into the service of the Confederate States, under the
provisions of this act, they shall have the same organization, and shall have the
same pay and allowances as may be provided for the regular army; and all
mounted non-commissioned officers, privates, musicians and artificers, shall
be allowed forty cents per day for the use and risk of their horses; and if any
volunteer shall not keep himself provided with a serviceable horse, such
volunteer shall serve on foot. For horses killed in action, volunteers shall be
allowed compensation according to their appraised value at the date of muster
into service.</p>
          <p>SEC. 8. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the field and staff officers of a
separate battalion of volunteers shall be one lieutenant colonel or major, one
adjutant with the rank of lieutenant, one sergeant-major, one quartermaster-
sergeant, and a chief bugler or principal musician, according to corps; and that
each company shall be entitled to an additional 2d lieutenant; and that the
President may limit the privates in any volunteer company, according to his
discretion, at from sixty-four to one hundred.</p>
          <pb id="acts70" n="70"/>
          <p>SEC. 9. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That when volunteers or militia are called
into the service of the Confederate States in such numbers that the officers of
the quartermaster, commissary, and medical departments, which may be
authorized by law for the regular service, are not sufficient to provide for the
supplying, quartering, transporting, and furnishing them with the requisite
medical attendance, it shall be lawful for the President to appoint, with the
advice and consent of the Congress, as many additional officers of said
departments as the service may require, not exceeding one commissary and
one quartermaster for each brigade, with the rank of major, and one assistant
quartermaster with the rank of captain, one assistant commissary with the rank
of captain, one surgeon and one assistant surgeon for each regiment; the
said quartermasters and commissaries, assistant quartermasters and
commissaries, to give bonds with good sureties for the faithful performance of
their duties, the said officers to be allowed the same pay and emoluments as
shall be allowed to officers of the same grade in the regular service, and to be
subject to the rules and articles of war, and to continue in service only so long
as their services may be required in connection with the militia or volunteers.</p>
          <p>SEC. 10. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the President be and he is hereby
authorized to purchase or charter, arm, equip and man such merchant vessels
and steamships or boats as may be found fit or easily converted into armed
vessels, and in such number as he may deem necessary for the protection of
the seaboard and the general defence of the country.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 6, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 49.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To repeal so much of the Laws of the Confederate States of <lb/>America as
prohibit the introduction of Liquors, except <lb/>in casks or vessels of or above
certain named capacity,<lb/> and for other purposes.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact</hi>,
That all laws and parts of laws which prohibit the importation into this
Confederacy of beer, ale or porter, or distilled spirits, except in casks or
vessels not below certain
<pb id="acts71" n="71"/>
prescribed capacities; also all laws requiring loaf and refined sugars to be
brought in, in vessels of a certain tonnage, and in packages of certain sizes,
be and the same are hereby repealed. And hereafter it shall be lawful to import
the same, subject to the payment of the duties prescribed by law, in such
quantities as the importer shall choose.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 5, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 50.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To provide for the Registration of Vessels owned in whole<lb/> or in part by
Citizens of the Confederate States.</head>
          <p>The Congress of the Confederate States of America do enact, That all vessels,
wherever built, one-fourth or more of which shall be owned by a citizen or
citizens of the Confederate States, and commanded by a citizen thereof, shall
be registered as a vessel of the Confederacy at the custom-houses thereof:
<hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That a majority in interest of the owners shall consent to such
registration, and such vessels be not registered elsewhere.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 6, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 51.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To establish and organize a Bureau in connection with the<lb/> Department of the
Treasury, to be known as the Lighthouse <lb/>Bureau.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States do enact</hi>, That there
shall be established in connection with the Department of the Treasury a
bureau, to be known as the Lighthouse Bureau. The chief officer of such
bureau shall
<pb id="acts72" n="72"/>
be a captain or commander of the navy, detailed for this service by order
of the President of the Confederate States , who shall receive as his
compensation the same pay allowed to officers of the same rank in the
navy. There shall be appointed also a chief clerk, with a salary of twelve
hundred dollars, and accounting clerk, with a salary of one thousand
dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. All lighthouses, light vessels, buoys, and other aids to navigation,
all the officers connected therewith, and all matters connected with the
construction, repair, illumination, inspection and government thereof, and
all duties appertaining to the administration of lighthouse affairs, shall be
under the direction and control of the Lighthouse Bureau hereby established,
subject at all times to the superintendence of the Secretary of the Treasury.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. The chief of the bureau shall, as soon as possible, divide the sea
coasts of the Confederate States into districts not exceeding five in number,
as the Secretary of the Treasury may deem expedient, and over each of these
districts the President shall appoint an inspector, to be selected from the
lieutenants in the navy, who shall discharge all the duties of inspection, survey
or otherwise which may be required of him by the chief of the bureau. For
these services the inspectors shall receive only their regular pay in the navy.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. The President of the Confederate States may from time to time, at the
request of the Secretary of the Treasury, detail one or more of the officers of
the engineer corps of the army, to be employed under the direction the
Lighthouse Bureau, in superintending the construction or repair of lighthouses
or other necessary structures in connection with the lighthouse establishment,
or other similar duty assigned by the Lighthouse Bureau in connection
therewith.</p>
          <p>SEC. 5. The chief of the bureau shall, at least once ever year, make a full
report to the Secretary of the Treasury giving a full statement of the
operations of the lighthouse establishment. He shall also from time to time
give such information to the Secretary of the Treasury as he may require in
reference to his bureau.</p>
          <p>SEC. 6. All laws and parts of laws contravening the provisions of this act are
hereby repealed.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 6, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <pb id="acts73" n="73"/>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 52.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>For the establishment and organization of the Army of the <lb/>Confederate States
of America.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America<sic corr="do"> no</sic> enact</hi>,
That from and after the passage of this act the military establishment of the
Confederate States shall be composed of one corps of engineers, one corps of
artillery, six regiments of infantry, one regiment of cavalry, and of the staff
departments already established by law.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. The Corps of Engineers shall consist of one Colonel, four Majors,
five Captains, and one company of sappers, miners and pontoniers, which
shall consist of ten sergeants or master workmen, ten corporals or overseers,
two musicians, and thirty-nine privates of the first class, or artificers, and
thirty-nine privates of the second class, or laborers, making in all one hundred.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. The said company shall be officered by one captain of the corps of
engineers, and as many lieutenants, to be selected by the President from the
line of the army, as he may deem necessary for the service, and shall be
instructed in and perform all the duties of sappers, miners and pontoniers, and
shall, moreover, under the orders of the chief engineer, be liable to serve by
detachments in overseeing and aiding laborers upon fortifications or other
works, under the engineer department, and in supervising finished
fortifications, as fortkeepers, preventing injury and making repairs.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. It shall be the duty of the colonel of the engineer corps, subject to the
approval of the Secretary of War, to prescribe the number, quantity, form,
dimensions, &amp;c., of the necessary vehicles, arms, pontons, tools, implements,
and other supplies for the service of the said company as a body of sappers,
miners and pontoniers.</p>
          <p>SEC. 5. The Corps of Artillery, which shall also be charged with ordnance
duties, shall consist of one colonel, one lieutenant colonel, ten majors, and
forty companies of artillerists and artificers, and each company shall consist of
one captain, two first lieutenants, one second lieutenant, four sergeants, four
corporals, two musicians and seventy privates. There shall also be one
adjutant, to be selected by the colonel from the first lieutenants, and one
sergeant-major, to be selected from the enlisted men of the corps.
<pb id="acts74" n="74"/>
The President may equip as light batteries, of six pieces each, such
of these companies as he may deem expedient, not exceeding four in
time of peace.</p>
          <p>SEC. 6. Each regiment of infantry shall consist of one colonel,
one lieutenant colonel, one major and ten companies; each
company shall consist of one captain, one first lieutenant, two
second lieutenants, four sergeants, four corporals, two musicians
and ninety privates; and to each regiment there shall be attached one
adjutant, to be selected from the lieutenants, and one sergeant major,
to be selected from the enlisted men of the regiment.</p>
          <p>SEC. 7. The regiment of cavalry shall consist of one colonel, one
lieutenant colonel, one major and ten companies, each of which shall
consist of one captain, one first lieutenant, two second lieutenants , four
sergeants, four corporals, one farrier, one blacksmith, two musicians and
sixty privates. There shall also be one adjutant and one sergeant major,
to be selected as aforesaid.</p>
          <p>SEC. 8. There shall be four brigadier generals, who shall be assigned
to such commands and duties as the President may specially direct,
and shall be entitled to one aid-de-camp, each, to be selected from the
subalterns of the line of the army, who, in addition to their duties as
aid-de-camp, may perform the duties of assistants adjutant general.</p>
          <p>SEC. 9. All officers of the army shall be appointed by the President,
by and with the advice and consent of the Congress, and the rank and
file shall be enlisted for a term not less than three nor more than five
years, under such regulations as may be established.</p>
          <p>SEC. 10. No officer shall be appointed in the army until he shall have
passed an examination satisfactory to the President, and in such manner
as he may prescribe, as to his character and fitness for the service. The
President, however, shall have power to postpone this examination for
one year after appointment, if in his judgment necessary for the public
interest.</p>
          <p>SEC. 11. All vacancies in established regiments and corps, to and
including the rank of colonel, shall be filled by promotion according
to seniority, except in case of disability or other incompetency.
Promotions to and including the rank of colonel shall be made
regimentally in the infantry and cavalry, in the staff departments,
and in the engineers and artillery, according to corps. Appointments to
<pb id="acts75" n="75"/>
the rank of brigadier general, after the army is organized, shall be
made by selection from the army.</p>
          <p>SEC. 12. The President of the Confederate States is hereby authorized
to appoint to the lowest grade of subaltern officers such meritorious
non-commissioned officers as may, upon the recommendation of their
colonels and company officers, be brought before an army board,
specially convened for the purpose, and found qualified for the duties
of commissioned officers, and to attach them to regiments or corps,
as supernumerary officers, if there be no vacancies: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, There
shall not be more than one so attached to any one company at the
same time.</p>
          <p>SEC. 13. The pay of a brigadier general shall be three hundred and one
dollars per month. The aid-de-camp of a brigadier general, in addition
to his pay as lieutenant, shall receive thirty-five dollars per month.</p>
          <p>SEC. 14. The monthly pay of the officers of the corps of engineers
shall be as follows: of the colonel, two hundred and ten dollars; of a
major, one hundred and sixty-two dollars; of a captain, one hundred
and forty dollars; lieutenants serving with the company of sappers
and miners, shall receive the pay of cavalry officers of the same grade.</p>
          <p>SEC. 15. The monthly pay of the colonel of the corps of artillery
shall be two hundred and ten dollars; of a lieutenant-colonel, one
hundred and eighty-five dollars; of a major, one hundred and fifty
dollars, and when serving on ordnance duty, one hundred and sixty-two
dollars; of a captain, one hundred and thirty dollars; of a first lieutenant,
ninety dollars; of a second lieutenant, eighty dollars; and the adjutant
shall receive, in addition to his pay as lieutenant, ten dollars per month.
Officers of artillery serving in the light artillery, or performing ordnance
duty, shall receive the same pay as officers of cavalry of the same
grade.</p>
          <p>SEC. 16. The monthly pay of the officers of the infantry shall be as
follows: of a colonel, one hundred and ninety-five dollars; of a
lieutenant-colonel, one hundred and seventy dollars; of a major, one
hundred and fifty dollars; of a captain, one hundred and thirty dollars;
of a first lieutenant, ninety dollars; of a second lieutenant, eighty dollars;
the adjutant, in addition to his pay as lieutenant, ten dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 17. The monthly pay of the officers of the cavalry shall be as
follows: of a colonel, two hundred and ten dollars; of a lieutenant-
colonel, one hundred and eighty-five dollars; a major, one hundred and
sixty-two dollars; a captain,
<pb id="acts76" n="76"/>
one hundred and forty dollars, a first lieutenant, one hundred dollars;
a second lieutenant, ninety dollars; the adjutant, ten dollars per month,
in addition to his pay as lieutenant.</p>
          <p>SEC. 18. The pay of the officers of the general staff, except those of
the medical department, shall be the same as that of officers of cavalry
of the same grade. The surgeon-general shall receive an annual salary
of three thousand dollars, which shall be in full of all pay and
allowances, except fuel and quarters. The monthly pay of a surgeon,
of ten years' service in that grade, shall be two hundred dollars; a
surgeon of less than ten years' service in that grade, one hundred
and sixty-two dollars; an assistant surgeon of ten years' service in that
grade, one hundred and fifty dollars; an assistant surgeon of five years'
service in that grade, one hundred and thirty dollars; and an assistant
surgeon of less than five years' service, one hundred and ten dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 19. There shall be allowed, in addition to the pay hereinbefore
provided, to every commissioned officer, except the surgeon-general,
nine dollars per month for every five years' service; and to the officers
of the army of the United States, who have resigned or may resign to
be received into the service of the Confederate States, this additional
pay shall be allowed from the date of their entrance into the former
service. There shall also be an additional monthly allowance  to every general
officer commanding in chief a separate army actually in the field, of
one hundred dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 20. The pay of officers as hereinbefore established shall be in full
of all allowances, except forage, fuel, quarters and travelling expenses
while travelling under orders. The allowance of forage, fuel and
quarters shall be fixed by regulations and shall be furnished in kind,
except when officers are serving at stations without troops where public
quarters cannot be had, in which case they may be allowed, in lieu of
forage, eight dollars per month for each horse to which they may be
entitled, provided they are actually kept in service and mustered, and
quarters may be commuted at a rate to be fixed by the Secretary of
War, and fuel at the market price delivered. An officer when travelling
under orders shall be allowed mileage at the rate of ten cents per mile.</p>
          <p>SEC. 21. In time of war, officers of the army shall be entitled to
draw forage for horses, according to grade, as follows: A brigadier-
general, four; the adjutant and inspector-general, quartermaster-general,
commissary-general, and the
<pb id="acts77" n="77"/>
colonels of engineers, artillery, infantry and cavalry, three each; all
lieutenant-colonels and majors, and captains of the general staff,
engineer corps, light artillery and cavalry, three each; lieutenants
serving in the corps of engineers, lieutenants of light artillery and of
cavalry, two each. In time of peace: general and field officers, three;
officers below the rank of field officers, in the general staff, corps
of engineers, light artillery and cavalry, two; <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, in all cases
that the horses are actually kept in service and mustered. No enlisted
man in the service of the Confederate States shall be employed as a
servant by any officer of the army.</p>
          <p>SEC. 22. The monthly pay of the enlisted men of the army of the
Confederate States shall be as follows: That of a sergeant or
master workman of the engineer corps, thirty-four dollars; that of a
corporal or overseer, twenty dollars; privates of the first class, or
artificers, seventeen dollars; and privates of the second class, or
laborers, and musicians, thirteen dollars. The sergeant-major of cavalry,
twenty-one dollars; first sergeants, twenty dollars; sergeants, seventeen
dollars; corporals, farriers and blacksmiths, thirteen dollars; musicians,
thirteen dollars; and privates, twelve dollars. Sergeants-major of
artillery and infantry, twenty-one dollars; first sergeants, twenty
dollars each; sergeants, seventeen dollars; corporals and artificers,
thirteen dollars; musicians, twelve dollars; and privates eleven
dollars each. The non-commissioned officers, artificers, musicians and
privates serving in light batteries shall receive the same pay as those
of cavalry.</p>
          <p>SEC. 23. The President shall be authorized to enlist as many master
armorers, master carriage-makers, master blacksmiths, armorers,
carriage-makers, blacksmiths, artificers, and laborers, for ordnance
service, as he may deem necessary, not exceeding in all one hundred
men, who shall be attached to the corps of artillery. The pay of a
master armorer, master carriage-maker, master blacksmith, shall
be thirty-four dollars per month; armorers, carriage-makers and
blacksmiths, twenty dollars per month; artificers, seventeen dollars,
and laborers, thirteen dollars per month.</p>
          <p>SEC. 24. Each enlisted man of the army of the Confederate States
shall receive one ration per day, and a yearly allowance of clothing,
the quantity and kind of each to be established by regulations from the
War Department, to be approved by the President.</p>
          <p>SEC. 25. Rations shall generally be issued in kind, but
<pb id="acts78" n="78"/>
under circumstances rendering a commutation necessary. The
commutation value of the ration shall be fixed by regulations of
the War Department, to be approved by the President.</p>
          <p>SEC. 26. The officers appointed in the army of the Confederate
States by virtue of this act, shall perform all military duties to which
they may be severally assigned by authority of the President, and it
shall be the duty of the Secretary of War to prepare and publish
regulations, prescribing the details of every department in the service,
for the general government of the army, which regulations shall be
approved by the President, and when so approved shall be binding.</p>
          <p>SEC. 27. All officers of the quartermaster's and commissary
departments shall, previous to entering on the duties of their respective
offices, give bonds with good and sufficient sureties to the Confederate
States, in such sum as the Secretary of War shall direct, fully to
account for all moneys and public property which they may receive.</p>
          <p>SEC. 28. Neither the quartermaster-general, the commissary-general,
nor any or either of their assistants, shall be concerned, directly or
indirectly, in the purchase or sale of any articles intended for,
making a part of, or appertaining to public supplies, except for and on
account of the Confederate States; nor shall they, or either of them,
take or apply to his or their own use any gain or emolument for
negotiating any business in their respective departments, other than
what is or may be allowed by law.</p>
          <p>SEC. 29. The Rules and Articles of War established by the laws
of the United States of America for the government of the army
are hereby declared to be of force, except that wherever the words
“United States” occur, the words “Confederate States” shall be
substituted therefor; and except that the articles of war numbers
sixty-one and sixty-two are hereby abrogated, and the following
articles substituted therefor:</p>
          <p>ARTICLE 61. Officers having brevets or commissions of a prior
date to those of the corps in which they serve will take place on
courts martial or of inquiry, and on boards detailed for military
purposes, when composed of different corps, according to the ranks
given them in their brevet or former commissions, but in the regiment,
corps, or company to which such officers belong, they shall do duty
and take rank, both in courts and on boards as aforesaid, which shall
<pb id="acts79" n="79"/>
be composed of their own corps, according to the commission by
which they are there mustered.</p>
          <p>ARTICLE 62. If upon marches, guards, or in quarters, different corps
shall happen to join or do duty together, the officer highest in rank,
according to the commission by which he is mustered in the army, navy,
marine corps, or militia, there on duty by orders from competent
authority, shall command the whole and give orders for what is needful
for the service, unless otherwise directed by the President of the
Confederate States in orders of special assignment providing for the case.</p>
          <p>SEC. 30. The President shall call into the service of the Confederate
States only so many of the troops herein provided for as he may deem
the safety of the Confederacy may require.</p>
          <p>SEC. 31. All laws or parts of laws of the United States, which have been
adopted by the Congress of the Confederate States, repugnant to or
inconsistent with this act, are hereby repealed.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 6, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 53.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To create the Clerical Force of the several Executive Departments<lb/>
of the Confederate States of America, and for other <lb/>purposes.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do
enact</hi>, That the clerical force of the several departments of the
Confederate States of America shall consist of the following officers:
To the State Department there shall be one chief clerk, at a salary of
fifteen hundred dollars per annum, and one clerk, at a salary of twelve
hundred dollars per annum, and also a messenger, whose annual
compensation shall be five hundred dollars.</p>
          <p>To the Treasury Department there shall be a chief clerk, whose salary
shall be fifteen hundred dollars per annum, and three other clerks, who
shall receive each twelve hundred dollars per annum; and there shall
be one messenger, at an annual compensation of five hundred dollars.</p>
          <p>To each of the bureaus of the Treasury Department,
<pb id="acts80" n="80"/>
viz: the comptroller, the auditor, the register and the treasurer,
there shall be a chief clerk, whose salaries shall be each fifteen
hundred dollars per annum; and to all of said bureaus there shall
be twenty-two clerks, eleven of whom shall receive salaries of
twelve hundred dollars each per annum, and eleven shall receive
salaries of one thousand dollars each per annum; and the said
Secretary of the Treasury shall have power to distribute said
twenty-two clerks among the said bureaus, as in his judgment will
best subserve the public interest; and to each of the offices of
comptroller, auditor, register and treasurer, there shall be a messenger,
with an annual salary of five hundred dollars.</p>
          <p>To the War Department there shall be a chief of the bureau of war,
at an annual salary of three thousand dollars, and five clerks, who shall
each receive twelve hundred dollars per annum; and one of them may
be appointed disbursing clerk, with an additional salary of six hundred
dollars, who shall give bond with sureties to be approved by the Secretary
of War. There shall also be one messenger, whose compensation shall
be five hundred dollars per annum. And to all of the bureaus of the
War Department, viz: the adjutant and inspector general, quartermaster
general, the commissary general, the surgeon general, the chief engineer
and the artillery, there shall be fourteen clerks, seven of whom shall
receive each a salary of twelve hundred dollars, and seven a salary
each of one thousand dollars per annum.</p>
          <p>And the Secretary of War is hereby authorized to assign said clerks to
duty in the respective offices enumerated, as in his judgment will best
promote the public service. And to each of said named bureaus, except
the office of surgeon general, there shall be, if deemed necessary by
the Secretary of War, a messenger, at an annual compensation of
five hundred dollars.</p>
          <p>To the Post-Office Department there shall be an assistant postmaster
general, with a salary of three thousand dollars per annum, and a chief
clerk at a salary of fifteen hundred dollars per annum, and ten other
clerks, five of whom shall receive salaries each of twelve hundred,
and five shall receive salaries each of one thousand dollars per annum.
And there shall be one messenger, at an annual salary of five hundred
dollars.</p>
          <p>To the Department of Justice there shall be an assistant attorney-general
at a salary of twenty-five hundred dollars per annum, and one clerk
whose annual salary shall be
<pb id="acts81" n="81"/>
twelve hundred dollars, and also a messenger at a salary of five hundred
dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. The annual salaries of the assistant secretary of state, the
assistant secretary of the treasury, the comptroller, the auditor, the
register and the treasurer shall each be the sum of three thousand
dollars per annum.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. The President of the Confederate States of America is
hereby authorized to appoint or employ in his official household
the following officers, to-wit: one private secretary, at an annual
salary of twelve hundred dollars, and one messenger, at an annual
salary of five hundred dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Secretaries of State,
Treasury, War, Navy, Attorney-General, and Postmaster-General
are hereby authorized to employ such other clerical force in their
respective departments as the exigencies of the public service
may absolutely require, being limited in the compensation to the
lower grade of salary for clerks provided for in this bill; they are
also empowered to employ such laborers for their respective
offices as may be required, not exceeding one for each of the
executive departments, and whose compensation shall not exceed
one dollar and fifty cents per day.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED<dateline> March 7, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 54.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>In relation to International Copyrights.</head>
          <p>WHEREAS, Great Britain, France, Prussia, Saxony and other
European Powers have passed laws to secure to authors of other
States, the benefits and privileges of their copyright laws, upon
condition of similar privileges being granted by the laws of such
States to authors, the subjects of the powers aforesaid, therefore be
it</p>
          <p rend="italics"><hi rend="italics">Resolved by the Congress of the Confederate States of America,</hi>
That the President be and he is hereby authorized to instruct the
Commissioners appointed by him, to visit the European Powers, to
enter into treaty obligations for the extension of international copyright
privileges to all authors, the citizens and subjects of the powers
aforesaid.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 7, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <pb id="acts82" n="82"/>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 55.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To create the clerical force of the Navy Department.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do
enact</hi>, That the clerical force of the Navy Department shall consist of
one chief clerk, at a salary of fifteen hundred dollars per annum, who
shall also perform the duties of disbursing agent and corresponding
clerk of said department, and receive therefor an extra compensation
of six hundred dollars per annum; and also three other clerks, two of
whom shall receive a salary each of twelve hundred dollars per annum,
and one a salary of one thousand dollars per annum; and there shall be
attached to said department a messenger, whose annual compensation
shall be five hundred dollars.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 8, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 56.] A RESOLUTION</head>
          <head>To continue the Mints at New Orleans and Dahlonega.</head>
          <p><hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do resolve</hi>,
That the mints at New Orleans and Dahlonega shall be continued,
and the proper arrangements made as soon as possible to procure
suitable dies for the coin of the Confederate States.</p>
          <p><hi rend="italics">Resolved further</hi>, That the Secretary of the Treasury be requested to
estimate and report to Congress the lowest amount of appropriation
necessary to carry out the above resolution.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 9, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 57.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To admit certain materials free of Duty for the construction<lb/>of
Telegraph Lines from Savannah, in the State of Georgia,<lb/> to Fort
Pulaski, and from Mobile, in the State of Alabama,<lb/> to Fort Morgan.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do
enact</hi>, That certain cable wire and other materials for
<pb id="acts83" n="83"/>
the construction of a telegraph line between the city of Savannah,
in the State of Georgia, and Fort Pulaski, in the same State, which
may be imported by C. C. Walden, the contractor for said line, be
admitted free of duty, upon satisfactory proof being submitted to
the collector of the port of Savannah that the materials herein
designated are imported for and applied to the construction of the
said telegraphic line.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the materials necessary
to construct a telegraphic line from Mobile to Fort Morgan may
also be imported free of duty.</p>
          <closer>APPROVED <dateline>March 9, 1861</dateline>.</closer>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="resolution">
          <head>No. 58.] AN ACT</head>
          <head>To authorize the Issue of Treasury Notes, and to prescribe<lb/> the
Punishment for forging the same, and for forging certificates<lb/> of
Stock, Bonds, or Coupons.</head>
          <p>SECTION 1. <hi rend="italics">The Congress of the Confederate States of America do
enact</hi>, That the President of the Confederate States of America is hereby
authorized to cause Treasury notes to be issued for such sum or sums
as the exigencies of the public service may require, but not to exceed
at any time one million of dollars, and of denominations not less than
fifty dollars for any such note, to be prepared, signed and issued in
the manner hereinafter provided.</p>
          <p>SEC. 2. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That such Treasury notes shall be
paid and redeemed by the Confederate States at the Treasury thereof,
after the expiration of one year from the dates of said notes, from which
dates they shall bear interest at the rate of one cent per day for every
hundred dollars issued: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That after the maturity of any of said
notes, interest thereon shall cease at the expiration of sixty days' notice
of readiness to pay and redeem the same, which may at any time or times
be given by the Secretary of the Treasury, in one or more newspapers
published at the seat of Government. The payment or redemption of
said notes herein provided shall be made to the lawful holders thereof
respectively, upon presentment at the Treasury, and shall include the
principal of each note and the interest which shall be due thereon.
And for such payment and redemption, at the
<pb id="acts84" n="84"/>
time or times herein specified, the faith of the Confederate States
of America is hereby pledged.</p>
          <p>SEC. 3. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That such Treasury notes shall be
prepared under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, and shall
be signed, in behalf of the Confederate States of America, by the
Treasurer thereof, and countersigned by the Register of the Treasury.
Each of these officers shall keep in a book or books provided for that
purpose, separate, full and accurate accounts showing the number,
date, amount and rate of interest of each Treasury note signed and
countersigned by them respectively; and also similar accounts showing
all such notes as may be paid, redeemed and cancelled, as the same may
be returned, all which accounts shall be carefully preserved in the
Treasury Department. And the Treasurer shall account quarterly
for all such Treasury notes as shall have been countersigned by the
Register, and delivered to the Treasurer for issue.</p>
          <p>SEC. 4. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Secretary of the Treasury
is hereby authorized, with the approbation of the President, to cause
such portion of said Treasury notes as may be deemed expedient to be
issued by the Treasurer in payment of warrants in favor of public
creditors or other persons lawfully entitled to such payment who may
choose to receive such notes in payment at par. And the Secretary of
the Treasury is further authorized, with the approbation of the President,
to borrow from time to time such sums of money, upon the credit of
such notes, as the President may deem expedient: <hi rend="italics">Provided</hi>, That no
Treasury notes shall be pledged, hypothecated, sold or disposed of in
any way, for any purpose whatever, either directly or indirectly, for
any sum less than the amount of such notes, including the principal
and interest thereof.</p>
          <p>SEC. 5. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That said Treasury notes shall be
transferable, by assignment endorsed thereon by the person to whose
order the same shall be made payable, accompanied together with the
delivery of notes so assigned.</p>
          <p>SEC. 6.<hi rend="italics"> And be it further enacted</hi>, That said Treasury notes shall be
received by the proper officers in payment of all duties and taxes laid
by the authority of the Confederate States of America, of all public
lands sold by said authority, and of all debts to the Confederate States
of America, of any character whatever, which may be due and payable
at the time when said Treasury notes may be offered in payment thereof,
except the export duty on cotton; and upon every such payment
<pb id="acts85" n="85"/>
credit shall be given for the amount of principal and interest, if any,
due on the note or notes received in payment on the day when the same
shall have been received by such officer.</p>
          <p>SEC. 7. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That every collector of the customs,
receiver of public moneys, or other officer or agent of the Confederate
States of America, who shall receive any Treasury note or notes in
payment on account of the Confederate States of America, shall
take from the holder of such note or notes a receipt upon the back of
each, stating distinctly the date of such payment and the amount
allowed upon such note; and every such officer or agent shall keep
regular and specific entries of all Treasury notes received in payment
showing the person from whom received, the number, date and amount
of principal and interest, if any, allowed on each and every Treasury
note received in payment, which entries shall be delivered to the
Treasury, with the Treasury note or notes mentioned therein, and if
found correct such officer or agent shall receive credit for the amount.</p>
          <p>SEC. 8. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Secretary of the Treasury
be and he is hereby authorized to make and issue from time to time
such instructions, rules and regulations to the several collectors,
receivers, depositaries and all others who may be required to receive
such treasury notes in behalf of and as agents in any capacity for the
Confederate States of America, as to the custody, disposal, canceling
and return of any such notes as may be paid to and received by them
respectively, and as to the accounts and returns to be made to the
Treasury Department of such receipts, as he shall deem best calculated
to promote the public convenience and security and to protect the
Confederate States of America, as well as individuals, from frauds
and loss.</p>
          <p>SEC. 9. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That the Secretary of the
Treasury be and he is hereby authorized and directed to cause to be
paid the principal and interest of such treasury notes as may be issued
under this act, at the time and times when, according to its provisions,
the same should be paid. And the said secretary is further authorized to
purchase said notes at par, for the amount of principal and interest due
at the time of the purchase of such notes. And so much of any
unappropriated money in the treasury as may be necessary for the
purpose is hereby appropriated to the payment of the principal and
interest of said notes.</p>
          <pb id="acts86" n="86"/>
          <p>SEC. 10. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That in place of such treasury notes as
may have been paid and redeemed, other treasury notes to the same amount
may be issued:<hi rend="italics"> Provided</hi>, That the aggregate sum outstanding under the
authority of this act shall at not time exceed one million of dollars: <hi rend="italics">And
provided further</hi>, That the power to issue and re-issue treasury notes
conferred on the President by this act shall cease and determine on the first
day of March, eighteen hundred and sixty-two.</p>
          <p>SEC. 11. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That if any person shall falsely make,
forge or counterfeit, or cause or procure to be falsely made, forged or
counterfeited, or willingly aid or assist in falsely making, forging or
counterfeiting any note in imitation of or purporting to be a treasury note,
issued as aforesaid, or shall pass, utter or publish, or attempt to pass, utter
or publish as true any false, forged or counterfeited note, purporting to be a
treasury note as aforesaid, knowing the same to be falsely made, forged or
counterfeited, or shall falsely alter, or cause or procure to be falsely altered,
or willingly aid and assist in falsely altering any treasury note, issued as
aforesaid, knowing the same to be falsely altered, every such person shall
be deemed and adjudged guilty of felony, and being thereof convicted by
due course of law, shall be sentenced to be imprisoned and kept at hard
labor for a period not less than three years nor more than ten years, and to
be fined in a sum not exceeding five thousand dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 12. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That if any person shall make or engrave,
or cause or procure to be made or engraved, shall have in his possession
any metallic plate engraved after the similitude of any plate from which any
notes issued as aforesaid shall have been printed, with intent to use such plate,
or cause or suffer the same to be used in forging or counterfeiting any of the
notes issued as aforesaid, or shall have in his custody or possession any blank
note or notes engraved and printed after the similitude of any notes issued
as aforesaid, with intent to use such blanks, or cause or suffer the same to be
used in forging or counterfeiting any of the notes issued as aforesaid, or shall
have in his custody or possession any paper adapted to the making of such
notes, and similar to the paper upon which any such notes shall have been
issued, with intent to use such paper
<pb id="acts87" n="87"/>
or cause or suffer the same to be used in forging or counterfeiting any of
the notes issued as aforesaid, every such person, being thereof convicted by
due course of law, shall be sentenced to be imprisoned and kept at hard labor
for a term not less than three nor more than ten years, and fined in a sum not
exceeding five thousand dollars.</p>
          <p>SEC. 13. <hi rend="italics">And be it further enacted</hi>, That if any person shall falsely make, 
forge or