| House. | Senate. | ||
| 53d Congress, 3d Session. | } H. R. 9846. | 53d Congress, 3d Session. | } S. 4973 |
| A BILL | A BILL | ||
| For the relief of George Washington Watkins, of Martinsburg, W. Va. | Granting an increase of pension to the survivors of the Mexican War. | ||
| By Mr. Wilson, of West Virginia. | By Mr. Voorhees. | ||
| December 22, 1894.—Referred to the Committee on Claims and ordered to be printed. | 1895—January 4.—Read twice and referred to the Committee on Pensions. | ||
9. In indorsements on bills in the Senate use a 9-em dash under the bill number; on bills in the House a parallel dash.
10. The name of the introducer of a bill or resolution is carried under the title in the indorsement, in long primer caps and small caps, between parallel rules, in both Houses, through each printing until bill or resolution passes one House.
11. When the title of a bill on the indorsement makes more than two lines, indent the runovers 1½ ems; center the title when it makes but one or two lines. On the face of the bill where a title makes more than one line, set the first line to full measure, centering the runover if there be two lines in the title; if more than two lines, indent the runovers 2 ems.
12. Titles for House bills are taken from the INDORSEMENT of copy; for Senate bills from the FACE of copy.
13. Preambles are set full measure, the first line of each “whereas” being flush and the runovers indented 2 ems. Where an agreement or treaty is part of a preamble, follow literally, indenting the paragraphs 4 ems and runovers 2 ems, full measure.
14. Titles and preambles following the head of a bill are always half-slugged.
15. Set “Calendar No.—,” on both face and indorsement of bills which have reached the Senate Calendar, in each case at the upper right-hand corner.