Annual Report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the State of the Finances, with AppendicesTreasury Department, 1863 - Finance, Public |
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... July 1 , 1863 Statement No. 14. Revenue collected from the beginning of the government to June 30 , 1863 , under the several heads of customs , internal revenue , direct tax , postage , public lands , and miscellaneous sources , with ...
... July 1 , 1863 Statement No. 14. Revenue collected from the beginning of the government to June 30 , 1863 , under the several heads of customs , internal revenue , direct tax , postage , public lands , and miscellaneous sources , with ...
Page 4
... July , 1862 , $ 508,526,499 08 , ( heretofore erroneously stated at $ 514,211,371 92 , ) gives as the true amount of debt on the 1st July , 1863 , $ 1,098,793,181 37 . The estimates for the current fiscal year 1864 next claim attention ...
... July , 1862 , $ 508,526,499 08 , ( heretofore erroneously stated at $ 514,211,371 92 , ) gives as the true amount of debt on the 1st July , 1863 , $ 1,098,793,181 37 . The estimates for the current fiscal year 1864 next claim attention ...
Page 6
... July , 1864 , $ 5,836,539 93 , the remainder will be $ 588,163,460 07 , and will represent the total increase , on the basis of these estimates , of public debt during the year . The debt on the 1st of July , 1863 , was $ 1,098,793,181 ...
... July , 1864 , $ 5,836,539 93 , the remainder will be $ 588,163,460 07 , and will represent the total increase , on the basis of these estimates , of public debt during the year . The debt on the 1st of July , 1863 , was $ 1,098,793,181 ...
Page 8
... July 1 , 1864 . From customs . From internal revenue From lands .... From miscellaneous sources . Making estimated aggregate receipts And he estimates the expenditures as follows : Estimated balance of former appropriations , unexpended ...
... July 1 , 1864 . From customs . From internal revenue From lands .... From miscellaneous sources . Making estimated aggregate receipts And he estimates the expenditures as follows : Estimated balance of former appropriations , unexpended ...
Page 10
... July , 1861 , the Secre- tary stated his conviction , that to a sound financial condition , a system of tax- ation certain to produce a sufficient revenue to pay the whole ordinary expenses of the government in times of peace , and the ...
... July , 1861 , the Secre- tary stated his conviction , that to a sound financial condition , a system of tax- ation certain to produce a sufficient revenue to pay the whole ordinary expenses of the government in times of peace , and the ...
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25 cents 30 per cent 4th article treaty 50 cents ad val amount authorized banks Beef Breadstuffs-Wheat flour bush Candles-Mould cents per bushel cents per gallon cents per pound chaldron clerks Coal-Anthracite Coffee-Brazil Congress Copper-Pig Corn meal custom-house debt Deputy collector disbursements district dollars Domestic whiskey duties estimated fiscal Fish-Dry cod Free gall Gunpowder-American Havana inspectors July July 17 June 11 June 30 light-house loans Merino mess Molasses-New Orleans Muscovado Naval stores-Spirits turpentine northern Nutmegs Oils-Whale payment port prime Provisions-Pork range of prices receipts red lead revenue Rye flour Salt-Liverpool Secretary Sept September 30 Sheetings-Russia Soap-New York Souchong Sperm Spices-Pepper Spirits Jamaica rum steamer Sugars-New Orleans supervising special agent Teas-Young Hyson Tobacco-Kentucky Total treasury notes Turk's Island turpentine United States notes vessels Wine-Port Wool-Common ба 7 ба ба 9 За
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Page 47 - An act to provide a national currency secured by a pledge of United States bonds, and to provide for the circulation and redemption thereof...
Page 97 - ... of any State, or to his duly authorized agents, the costs, charges, and expenses properly incurred by such State for enrolling, subsisting, clothing, supplying, arming, equipping, paying, and transporting its troops employed in aiding to suppress the present insurrection against the United States, to be settled upon proper vouchers to be filed and passed upon by the proper accounting officers of the Treasury.
Page 200 - ... of an ounce. The method is preferable to expressing the weight in grains for commercial purposes, and corresponds better with the terms of the mint. It may be readily transferred to weight in grains by the following rule: — Remove the decimal point; from one-half deduct four per cent.