XXXIV AGT.S AND RESOLUTIONS OF CONGRESS. 



NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



Heating and Liohting: For expense of beating the United States 

 National Museum for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen 

 hundred and eighty nine, one thousand dollars. 



(A.ct to supply deficiencies. Approved March 2, 1S89. Statutes 

 XXV, p. 900.) 



Heating and Lighting: For expense of heating, lighting, and elec- 

 trical and telephonic service for the National Museum, twelve thousand 

 dollars. 



Preservation ()f Collections of the National Museum : For 

 the preservation, exhibition, and increase of the collections from the 

 surveying and exploring expeditions of the Government, and from other 

 sources, including salaries or compensation of all necessary employees, 

 one hundred and forty thousand dollars. 



Furniture and Fixtures of the National Museum: For cases, 

 furniture, fixtures, and appliances required for the exhibition and safe- 

 keeping of the collections of the National Museum, including salaries 

 or compensation of all necessary employees, thirty thousand dollars. 



Postage: For postage-stamps and foreign postal-cards for the Na- 

 tional Museum, one thousand dollars. 



(Sundry civil appropriation act. Approved March 2, 1889. Statutes 

 XXV, pp.952, 953.) 



Public Printing and Binding for the National Museum: 

 For printing labels and blanks for the use of the National Museum, 

 and for the "Bulletins," and annual volumes of the "Proceedings" of 

 the Museum, ten thousand dollars. 



(Sundry civil appropriation act. Approved March 2, 1889. Statutes 

 XXV, p. 979.) 



Fish Commission: For altering and fitting up the interior of the 

 Armory Building, on the Mall, city of Washington, now occupied as a 

 hatching station, for the accommodation of the offices of the United 

 States Fish Commission, and for general repairs to said building, inclu- 

 ding the heating apparatus, and for repairing and extending the out- 

 buildings, seven thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may be neces- 

 sary, the same to be immediately available and to be expended under 

 the direction of the Architect of the Capitol; and for the purpose above 

 named the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution is hereby required 

 to move from the second and third stories of this building all properties 

 except such as are connected with the workshops hereinafter named, 

 under his control; and the workshops now in the second story of said 

 building shall be transferred to and provided for in the third story 

 thereof. And the Architect of the Capitol is hereby directed to ex- 

 amine and make report to Congress at its next regular session as to the 

 practicability and cost of constructing a basement story under the Na- 

 tional Museum Building. 



(Sundry civil appropriation act. Approved March 2, 1889. Statutes 

 XXV, p. 953.) 



ZOOLOGICAL PARK. 



Sec. 4. For the establishment of a zoological park in the District of 

 Columbia, two hundred thousand dollars, to be expended under and in 

 a(!Cordance with the provisions following, that is to say: 



That in order to establish a zoological park in the District of Co- 

 lumbia, for the advancement of science and the instruction and recrea- 

 tion of the people, a commission shall be constituted, composed Qf thr^e 



