Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 11.djvu/452

 432 THIRTY-FIFTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 83. 1859. and on other constant labor, for periods of not less than ten days, under 1819, ch. 45. the acts of March second, eighteen hundred and nineteen, and August lg;}  g’;7*8§8é fourth, eighteen hundred and fifty-four, including those employed as clerks Vol? X_`p_ ,;»}6_at division and department head-quarters ; expenses of expresses to and from the frontier posts and armies in the field; of escorts to paymasters and other disbursing officers, and to trains, where military escorts cannot be furnished; expense of the interment of officers killed in action, or who die when on duty in the field, or at the posts on the frontiers, and of noncommissioned officers and soldiers ; authorized office furniture; hire of laborers in the quartermaster’s department, including the hire of interpreters, spies, and guides for the army; compensation of clerks of the officers of the quartermastefs department; compensation of forage and wagon masters, 1838, ch. 162, authorized by the act of July fifth, eighteen hundredband thirty-eight; for § 10- the apprehension of. deserters, and· the expenses incident to their pursuit; V°l‘ v` p' W" and for the following expenditures required for the two regiments of dragoons, the two regiments of cavalry, the regiment of mounted rifiemen, and such companies of infantry as may be mounted, viz: the purchase of travelling forges, blacksmiths’ and shoeing tools, horse and mule shoes and nails, iron and steel for shoeing, hire of veterinary surgeons, medicines for horses and mules, picket ropes, and for shoeing the horses of the p,.,,,,;,, corps named, four hundred and fifty thousand dollars: Provided, That the amount of this appropriation below the estimates shall be deducted from the amount estimated for pay of laborers in the quartermaster’s department. Barrncks, Sw- For constructing barracks and other buildings at posts which it may be necessary to occupy during the year; and for repairing, altering, and enlarging buildings at the established posts, including hire or commutation of quarters for officers on military duty; hire of quarters for troops, of storehouses for the safe-keeping of military stores, and of grounds for summer cantonments ; and for temporary frontier stations, three hundred Proviso. thousand dollars: Provided, That no permanent barracks and quarters NOW, bg mm. shall hereafter be constructed, unless detailed estimates shall have been muwd wi¤1x<>¤¤ previously submitted to Congress and shall have been approved by a previous detailed - · · mmm8s_ special appropriation for the same. Mileage of For mileage or the allowance made to officers of the army for the trans- °m°°“v &°· portation of themselves and their baggage, when travelling on duty without troops, escorts, or supplies, one hundred and twenty-five thousand Proviso. dollars: Provided, That mileage shall not be allowed when the officer has been transferred or relieved at his own request. Transportation. For transportation of the army, including the baggage of the troops when moving either by land or water; of clothing, camp and garrison equipage from the depot at Philadelphia to the several posts and army depots, and from those depots to the troops in the field; of horse equipments and of subsistence from the places of purchase and from the places of delivery under contract, to such places as the circumstances of the service may require them to be sent ; of ordnance, ordnance stores, and small arms, from the foundries and armories, to the arsenals, fortifications, frontier posts, and army depots; freights, wharfage, tolls, and ferriages; for the purchase and hire of horses, mules, and oxen, and the purchase and repair of wagons, carts, and drays, and of ships, and other scagoing vessels and boats required for the transportation of supplies and for garrison purposes; for drayage and cartage at the several posts ; hire of teamsters ; transportations of funds for the pay and other disbursing departments; the expense of sailing public transports on the various rivers, the Gulf of Water. Mexico, and the Atlantic and Pacidc; and for procuring water at such posts as from their situation require that it be brought from a distance; Roads. and for clearing roads and removing obstructions therein to the extent which may be required for the actual operations of the troops on the frontier, three million dollars.