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SEC. 2. [Payment of interest and principal.]-The annual interest and principal of said bonds, when the same becomes due, shall be paid by the state treasurer out of the state sinking fund, and the coupons and bonds when so paid shall be cancelled and preserved by the state treasurer as vouchers for the payments so made. [Id. § 4. Amended 1877, 63.j

SEC. 3. [Bonds for funding state indebtedness.]-That for the purpose of funding the foregoing indebtedness, the governor and secretary of state be and they are hereby authorized and required to issue the lithographed coupon bonds of the state of Nebraska, to the amount of five hundred and sixty-six thousand, three hundred and sixty-nine dollars and thirty-eight cents, payable twenty years after April 1st, 1877, with interest at eight per cent. per annum, said interest payable semi-annually on the first day of October and April of each year thereafter. Principal and interest of said bonds shall be payable at the treasury of this state. Said bonds to be of the denomination of not more than one thousand dollars each, and the same, with the coupons, shall be payable to bearer. Said bonds, when issued, shall be registered by the auditor of public accounts, in a book kept for that purpose in his office, and when so registered and certified by him under his seal of office to have been regularly and properly issued, and that the signatures thereto are genuine, shall be sold in the manner following, to wit: First. To the permanent school fund of this state, to an amount sufficient to take up the said certificates of indebtedness now held by said fund issued as hereinbefore set forth. Second. To the permanent school fund of this state, to an amount sufficient to invest whatever funds may be in the treasury of the state on the first day of April, 1877, belonging to said fund and proper to be invested, it being the intention to give preference to the said school fund to invest its moneys in the bonds hereby required to be issued, before the same shall be offered for sale in open market. It shall be the duty of the board of commissioners named in section one of article eight of the constitution, to invest the said moneys in said bonds, as hereinbefore provided. And whatever amount of said bonds shall be purchased by the said school fund shall be without premium. Any and all bonds so as aforesaid purchased by the said school fund shall be and remain the property thereof. Third. If any bonds shall then remain unsold, it shall be the duty of the state treasurer to advertise for bids therefor, in one daily newspaper in the city of New York, Omaha and Lincoln, for at least thirty days prior to any sale thereof; all bids shall be sealed and remain unopened until the day of sale as mentioned in tho said advertisement. Upon the day of sale the treasurer shall open any and all bids, and in connection with the governor and auditor of public accounts, shall examine the same and award the said bonds or any thereof, to the best and highest bidder therefor, but in no event shall any of said bonds be sold at a discount. Persons or corporations owning any of said warrants or certificates of indebtedness may be bidders therefor; Provided, No bid shall be received for a less sum than one thousand dollars; and in awarding the said bonds at such sale, the said officers shall take into consideration that fact, and shall give preference to the creditors of the state; Provided, Such bids be of equal advantage to the best interests of the state. Upon the sale of said bonds, if the bid of any person holding any of such warrants or certificates of indebtedness be accepted, the said warrants or certificates shall be received by the treasurer in exchange for said bonds; if such bids be awarded to other persons, cash only shall be received in exchange therefor. Such sale of said bonds with the coupons attached, shall take place at the treasury of the state, on or before the first day of April, 1877, and thereupon it shall be the duty of the said treasurer to pay all of said warrants and certificates, together with interest thereon, as herein provided, out of the sales of said bonds when presented to him for payment; Provided, That all interest shall cease on any of said warrants or certificates if not presented for payment on or before the first day of May, 1877. [1877 § 1, 132.

SECS. 3-7. "An act to provide for funding of all outstanding warrants and other indebtedness of the state." Laws 1877, 120. Took effect Feb. 14, 1877. Preamble, reciting amounts of indebtedness, omitted.

SEC. 4. [Custody of bonds.]-The treasurer of the state shall be the custodian of all bonds purchased by the permanent school fund as aforesaid. [Id. § 2.] SEC. 5. [Payment of principal and interest.]-The principal and interest accruing on said bonds shall be payable in the currency of the United States, from the sinking fund; the coupons upon payment shall be canceled by the treasurer. [Id. § 3.]

SEC. 6. [Cancellation of warrants.]-Upon the exchange or payment of such warrants and certificates as herein provided, the auditor of public accounts and treasurer shall cancel the same by writing across the face of each warrant and certificate the words "canceled by act of the legislature," giving the date of the approval of this act, and sign their names to such cancelation, and said treasurer shall report to the next regular session of the legislature his doings, under the provisions of this act. [Id. § 4.]

SEC. 7. [Penalty.-Any person offending against the provisions of this act shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and shall be punished by fine not less [than] $5,000 and not more than $10,000, and by imprisonment in the state prison not less than five years, and not more than ten years, in the discretion of the court pronouncing sentence. [Id. § 5.]

ARTICLE XII. -SUPPLIES FOR STATE INSTITUTIONS.

SECTION 1. [Proposals.]—That all purchases and contracts for supplies for any of the departments and public institutions of the state, where the public exigencies do not require the immediate delivery of the articles, shall be by advertising a sufficient time previously for proposals for supplying the same. [1877 § 1, 199.1

SEC. 2. [Board of supp1y-Proposals.]-At least one month previous to the first day of January, April, July and October, respectively in each year, a board consisting of the governor, commissioner of public lands and buildings, secretary of state, treasurer and attorney general, shall meet with the warden of the state prison, and the superintendent of each of the asylums or other institutions furnished by the state, and determine the supplies that may be necessary for three months, except articles as may be perishable and cannot be kept. Said board shall designate clearly the quantity and quality of the articles, and shall then advertise for ten days in some newspaper published at the capital, having general circulation in the state, before the first day of January, April, July and October respectively, for proposals for furnishing said articles and for each institution. separately, to be delivered at the institution within ten days after the first day of the months aforesaid; Provided, That the board may permit the delivery of tho goods monthly, if in their judgment it be deemed best." And the bids which propose to. furnish the supplies for either institution at the lowest rate, shall be received for such institution; Provided further, That no proposal shall be considered by said board unless the same is accompanied by a bond with such security as the board shall determine, with condition to furnish said articles as proposed in said bid.

SEC. 3. [Other supplies.]-All supplies for such institutions not purchased as provided in this act, shall be purchased in such manner as shall be directed by said board by written instruction.

SEC. 4. [Advertisement.]—The head of each of the executive departments respectively shall advertise for proposals for supplying the departments in accordance with the provisions of this act.

SEC. 5. [Payment.]-All vouchers for supplies, having been examined and approved by said board or the head of the department, as the case may be, shall be approved by the secretary of state, and thereupon the auditor of state shall draw his warrant upon the treasurer for the amount.

ART. XII. "An act to regulate the purchase of supplies for the public institutions, and the executive de-, partments of the state." Laws 1877, 199. Took effect June 1, 1877.

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ARTICLE XIII.-MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS.

SECTION 1. [Accumulation of funds in excess of $100,000.]— Whenever there shall have accumulated in the hands of the state treasurer moneys of the state to an amount in excess of the sum of one hundred thousand dollars, the state treasurer shall in writing notify the governor and auditor of state of that fact and thereupon within three days after the service of such notice, the governor, auditor, and treasurer shall meet and determine whether such excess is necessary to be retained in the treasury, for the purpose of meeting the current demands thereon; and the record of said notification and the proceedings of said meeting, and of its finding, shall be made and signed by each of such officers, and preserved in the office of the auditor, who shall act as the secretary of such meeting. [1879 § 1, 152.]

SEC. 2. [Investment of excess.]-In case said officers shall find that said excess is not necessary to meet the current demands upon the treasury, the same shall be immediately invested in United States four per cent bonds, by the treasurer, who shall deposit the same in some safe deposit, to be designated by the governor, auditor, and treasurer, in writing, signed by them and made of record in the auditor's office, and there kept until it shall become necessary to convert the same into money, which necessity shall be determined and the record thereof kept in like manner as hereinbefore provided, and a statement of any such investment or sale under oath shall be published within ten days after the same is made. in some newspaper published at the capital, to be designated in writing by the governor. There shall also be published in the same paper, a monthly statement under oath, of the amount of cash balance in the state treasury, and of the amount invested as aforesaid. [Id. § 2.]

SEC. 3. [Penalty.-Any officer charged with the duties herein before mentioned, who shall make or publish any false statement, or swear falsely in respect to any matter or thing, in respect to which a sworn statement is herein required, shall be deemed guilty of perjury, and shall be prosecuted and punished accordingly. [Id. § 3.]

SEC. 4. [Defaulting county treasurers.]-The auditor of public ac counts, state treasurer, and attorney general, shall form a board, and as such, are hereby authorized and empowered to make all settlements for moneys due the state of Nebraska from any county treasurer or his bondsmen, against whom judgment has been rendered in any court of this state, in such manner as in their judgment shall be to the best interests of the state. [1877 § 1, 201.]

CHAPTER 84.-STATE CEMETERY.*

SECTION 1. [Lands set apart.]—That eighty acres of land belonging to the state of Nebraska, to be selected as hereinafter provided, be and the same are hereby set apart for the uses and purposes of a state cemetery at or near Lincoln, the capital of the state. [1869, 250. G. S. 1026.]

SEC. 2. [Trustees-Election.]-That at the election for city officers of said city of Lincoln, occurring next after the passage of this act, the qualified voters of said city shall elect three trustees, to be known as "trustees of the state cemetery," one of whom shall hold his office for one year, one for two years, and one fr three years, the term of service of each respectively to be decided by lot, so that one of said trustees shall be elected annually by the qualified voters aforesaid, at each annual election for city officers of said city thereafter occurring. Said trustees shall be a body corporate, with power to sue and be sued, contract and be contracted with, and acquire, and hold, or convey property, real or personal, for all purposes consistent with the provisions of this act.

SECS. 1-3. "An act to provide for the safe keeping of moneys belonging to the state." Laws 1879, 152. Took effect June 1, 1879. SEC. 4. "An act to provide for a state board for the settlement of claims against defaulting county treasurers and their bondsmen." Laws 1877, 201. Took effect June 1, 1877. *NOTE.-"An act to provide for a state cemetery at Lincoln. Laws 1869, 250. G. S. 1026. Took effect Feb. 15, 1869.

SEC. 3. [Site-Selection.]—That within sixty days from the passage of this act, said trustees shall select, subject to the approval of the governor, a site for said cemetery, not more than three miles distant from the state capitol building, which said site, when so selected as aforesaid, shall be conveyed by the governor to said trustees, to be held, used, and controlled by them for the benefit of the state, and for the uses and purposes herein set forth.

SEC. 4. [Survey-Divisions-Sale of lots.-Said trustees shall cause the said lands to be laid off and platted by a competent surveyor, to be then selected, and shall set apart, in suitable subdivisions, not less than fifty acres of said cemetery, to be devoted as burial places for the inmates of the various benevolent, or other public institutions of the state, which are, or may hereafter be located at Lincoln. The residue of said cemetery, not exceeding thirty acres, shall be set apart as a burial ground for the uses and purposes of the citizens of Lincoln, and shall be subdivided and platted by said trustees, and sold, in lots of suitable size, and upon such terms and at such prices as said trustees may prescribe, to citizens of Lincoln, the proceeds of such lots to be devoted, under the direction of said trustees, to the improvement and ornamentation of the grounds, and for such other purposes, consistent with the provisions of this act, as they may determine.

SEC. 5. [Land sold-Proceeds.-That eighty acres of land belonging to the state, in addition to the cemetery site, herein provided for, to be selected by the governor, shall be sold at public or private sale, as the governor may determine, the proceeds of said sale to be by the governor paid over to said trustees, to be by them expended in suitably enclosing and ornamenting with forest trees, evergreens, and shrubbery, the cemetery grounds aforesaid.

SEC. 6. [Sexton.-The said trustees shall have power to employ a sexton to take charge of said cemetery, and keep the same in good order and repair, and superintend the setting out of trees, and the care of the same, and perform such other duties as said trustees shall prescribe, and they shall pay to said sexton such salary, out of the proceeds of the sale of the lots or lands herein provided for, as they shall deem just and reasonable.

SEC. 7. [Trustees-Powers.-Said trustees shall have power to prescribe all needful rules and regulations for the government of said cemetery grounds, and for the burial of the dead from the various public institutions of the state, in the subdivisions set apart by them for that purpose, and to do and perform such other duties, consistent with the objects herein contemplated, as they shall deem necessary for the good government of the same.

CHAPTER 85.-STATE LIBRARY.

SECTION 1. [What shall constitute.]-That the books, pamphlets, maps, and charts, belonging to the state library, now in the state library, or which shall hereafter be added to the same, shall constitute the state library. [1871 § 1, 12.]

SEC. 2. [Divisions-Librarians.]-There shall be two divisions of the state library, one of which shall embrace, all miscellaneous works, books, pamphlets, maps, and charts, and the statutes and, other books required by law to be deposited in the office of the secretary of state, and shall be known as the miscellaneous division of the state library. The other shall embrace all books of reports, and other law books, and shall be known as the law division of the state library.

SEC. 3. [Directors.]-The governor, secretary of state, and auditor shall constitute a board of directors of the miscellaneous division, and the judges of the supreme court shall constitute a board of directors of the law division of the state library.

SEC. 4. [Rules.]-Each board of directors shall have power to make such rules not inconsistent with this act, for the regulation of the division of the library under their direction, as they may elect proper, and may prescribe penalties for

NOTE." An act regulating the state library." Laws 1871, 52. Chap. 75. G. S. 1028. Took effect Mar. 5. 1871. Sec 9 of original act repealed 1881, 102, ante p. 75. Sec. 10 superseded by sec. 8, Art. VI. Const.

any violations thereof, which shall be collected in the same manner as for non-return or injury of any books.

SEC. 5. [Who may take books.]-Books may be taken from the state library by the members of the legislature, and its officers, during the session of the legislature, and by the officers of the executive department of the state, and the judges of the supreme court and district courts; and no other person shall be permitted to take or detain from the library more than two miscellaneous works at any one time, or take the same away from the capitol.

SEC. 6. [Register of books loaned.]-Each librarian shall cause to be kept a register of all books issued and returned at the time they shall be so issued and returned, and none of the books, except the laws, journals, and reports of this state, which may be taken from the library, shall be detained more than ten days, and all the books taken out by officers or members of the legislature, shall be returned at the close of the session.

SEC. 7. [Failure to return books.]--If ary person injure, or fail to return any book taken from the library, he shall forfeit, and pay to the librarian of the division to which it belongs, for the use of the library double the value thereof, or of the set to which it belongs, if a set is broken by its loss, to be recov ered, by an action, in the name of the people of the state, in any court of competent jurisdiction; and before the auditor shall issue his warrant in favor of any person authorized to take books from the library for the value of his services, or amount of his salary, he shall be satisfied that such person has returned all books taken from the library, or settled for the same; otherwise he shall deduct all accounts for the detention or injury of such books.

SEC. 8. [Librarian's report to governor.]—The librarian shall, on or before the 20th day of December in each year, report to the governor the condition of the division under his charge, stating the number of volumes contained therein, the number of volumes purchased during the past year, and the cost thereof, the number of volumes received by donation, the number of volumes injured or not returned, if any, and the amount received in compensation therefor, and such suggestions and further information as may be deemed by him desirable. SEC. 9. [Annual appropriation.-Two hundred dollars shall be annually paid out of the state treasury for the use of the library, one-half for each division, which amount, together with the amounts received from fines and forfeitures, under this act, shall be annually expended in the purchase of additional books, under the direction of the board of directors.

SEC. 10. Books stamped and marked.]-It shall be the duty of each librarian to cause each book in his division to be labeled with a printed or stamped label containing the words "Nebraska State Library," and also to write the same words on the thirtieth page of each volume.

SEC. 11. [Books-Sale-Exchange.-The directors of the law division of the state library may sell or exchange any surplus or duplicate sets of reports or law books in such division of the library, and use the money arising from such sale in purchasing other law books or reports for such library.

SEC. 12. [Books-Removal-Penalty.--If either librarian shall permit or allow any person not authorized by this act to remove a book from the library, he shall be liable on conviction thereof, to pay a fine of not less than five nor more than fifty dollars for every book so taken.

SEC. 13. Same-Penalty.]-If any person not authorized by this act shall take a book from the library, either with or without the consent of the librarian, he shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined in any sum not less than ten nor more than fifty dollars for every book so taken.

SEC. 14. [Distribution of publications to other states.]-The librarian of the law division of the state library is hereby authorized and required to send one copy each of all reports, session laws, journals of senate and house of representatives, and any other books and pamphlets hereafter published for the use of the state of Nebraska, to every one of the states, for the use of their respective libraries. [1871 § 1, 55.]

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