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orious. GROVER CLEVELAND. EXECUTIVE MANSION, _August 10, 1888_. _To the House of Representatives_: I return herewith a joint resolution which originated in the Senate, and is numbered 17, providing for the printing of additional copies of the United States map of the edition of 1886, prepared by the Commissioner of Public Lands. This resolution directs that 7,500 of these maps shall be printed at a rate not exceeding $1.35 each; that 2,000 of said maps shall be for the use of the Senate, 4,000 for the use of the House of Representatives, 500 for the Commissioner of the Land Office, and that 1,000 be mounted and sold at the price of $1.50 each. The sum of $10,125 is appropriated to pay the expense of the publication of said maps. The propriety and expediency of this appropriation, to be applied so largely by the two branches of Congress, should be left to legislative discretion. I believe, however, that through inadvertence the duplication of the edition of these maps issued in 1886 has been directed by this joint resolution instead of the edition of 1887. The map of 1886 was published at a cost of $1.25 per copy. The map of 1887 will very soon be issued at a cost of $1 per copy, and the publishers have offered to print an enlarged edition at the rate of 95 cents for each map. This map will be later, more correct, more valuable in every way, and cheaper than that issued the previous year. Upon these facts I return the joint resolution without approval, in the belief that the Congress will prefer to correct the same by directing the publication of the latest, best, and cheapest map, and reducing the amount appropriated therefor. GROVER CLEVELAND. EXECUTIVE MANSION, _August 14, 1888_. _To the Senate_: I return without approval Senate bill No. 2653, entitled "An act granting a pension to Mary Curtin." The husband of this beneficiary was mustered into the military service October 8, 1862, was wounded in the right arm, and was discharged September 3, 1863. He was pensioned for his wound to the time of his death, September 17, 1880. The physician attending him in his last illness testified that the deceased was in the last stages of consumption when pneumonia intervened and caused his death. I do not understand that this physician gives the least support to the theory that the wound for which this soldier was pensioned was in the slightest degree connected with his death, and
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