the year ending June 30, 1858, whilst the pay and
mileage amounted to $1,490,214, the contingent expenses
rose to $2,093,309.79; and for the year ending June
30, 1859, whilst the pay and mileage amounted to $859,093.66,
the contingent expenses amounted to $1,431,565.78.
I am happy, however, to be able to inform you that
during the last fiscal year, ending June 30, 1860,
the total expenditures of the Government in all its
branches—legislative, executive, and judicial—exclusive
of the public debt, were reduced to the sum of $55,402,465.46.
This conclusively appears from the books of the Treasury.
In the year ending June 30, 1858, the total expenditure,
exclusive of the public debt, amounted to $71,901,129.77,
and that for the year ending June 30, 1859, to $66,346,226.13.
Whilst the books of the Treasury show an actual expenditure
of $59,848,474.72 for the year ending June 30, 1860,
including $1,040,667.71 for the contingent expenses
of Congress, there must be deducted from this amount
the sum of $4,296,009.26, with the interest upon it
of $150,000, appropriated by the act of February 15,
1860, “for the purpose of supplying the deficiency
in the revenues and defraying the expenses of the
Post-Office Department for the year ending June 30,
1859.” This sum therefore justly chargeable
to the year 1859, must be deducted from the sum of
$59,848,474.72 in order to ascertain the expenditure
for the year ending June 30, 1860, which leaves a
balance for the expenditures of that year of $55,402,465.46.
The interest on the public debt, including Treasury
notes, for the same fiscal year, ending June 30, 1860,
amounted to $3,177,314.62, which, added to the above
sum of $55,402,465.46, makes the aggregate of $58,579,780.08.
It ought in justice to be observed that several of
the estimates from the Departments for the year ending
June 30, 1860, were reduced by Congress below what
was and still is deemed compatible with the public
interest. Allowing a liberal margin of $2,500,000
for this reduction and for other causes, it may be
safely asserted that the sum of $61,000,000, or, at
the most, $62,000,000, is amply sufficient to administer
the Government and to pay the interest on the public
debt, unless contingent events should hereafter render
extraordinary expenditures necessary.
This result has been attained in a considerable degree
by the care exercised by the appropriate Departments
in entering into public contracts. I have myself
never interfered with the award of any such contract,
except in a single case, with the Colonization Society,
deeming it advisable to cast the whole responsibility
in each case on the proper head of the Department,
with the general instruction that these contracts should
always be given to the lowest and best bidder.
It has ever been my opinion that public contracts
are not a legitimate source of patronage to be conferred
upon personal or political favorites, but that in all
such cases a public officer is bound to act for the
Government as a prudent individual would act for himself.