Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 16.djvu/447

 FORTY—FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 53, 54. 1871. 413 take the oath prescribed in the act of Congress approved July two, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, said person shall, in lieu of said oath, 1862,cb, 128, before entering upon the duties of said office, take and subscribe the VOL xii- P- 60* oath prescribed in an act of Congress entitled “An act prescribing an %§?8;,$l’,,?2,%_ oath of office to be taken by persons from whom legal disabilities shall l have been removed," approved July eleven, eighteen hundred and sixty- eight. J. G. BLAINE, Quaker of the Muse of Representatives. SCHUYLER COLFAX, Vice-President of the United States and President of the Senate. Received by the President February 3, 1871. [Norm BY rms DEPARTMENT or STATE.- The foregoing act havin been presented to the President of the United States for his approval, and not having been returned by him to the House of Congress in which it originated within the time prescribed by the Constitution of the United States, has become a law without his approval.] CHAP. LIV.——An Act making Appropriations for the Support of the Mlitary Academy Feb. 18, 1871. _/or the jiscal Year ending June thirty, eighteen hundred and seventy-two. —U`_“" Be it enacted by the Senate and [Ruse of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the following sums be, MUi¢¤1‘.Y A9516- and the same are hereby, appropriated out of any money in the treasury 3:; appr°Pm` not otherwise appropriated, for the support of the Military Academy for the year ending the thirtieth of June, eighteen hundred and seventy- two : ——- For additional pay of officers, and for pay of instructors, cadets, and Officerainmusicians, two hundred and twenty-eight thousand seven hundred and §;:`°t°“*°”d°tS· seventy-five dollars and fifty cents. For repairs and improvements, twenty-two thousand nve hundred &cR¤P¤iY¤· YM]. dollars. ` For fuel and apparatus, fourteen thousand dollars. For annual repairs of gas-pipes, gas-meters, and retorts, six hundred dollars. For fuel for cadets’ mess-hall, and shops, and laundry, three thousand tive hundred dollars. For postage and telegrams, two hundred dollars. For stationery, five hundred dollars. For transportation, one thousand two hundred dollars. T¤w¤p¤r¤¤ti<>¤· For type and materials for office and diplomas for graduates, four hundred dollars. For cadet registers, class reports, and blanks, three hundred dollars. For compensation to pressman and lithographer, one hundred dollars. For clerk to disbursing officer and quartermaster, one thousand six hundred and fifty dollars. For clerk to adjutant, one thousand five hundred dollars. For clerk to treasurer, one thousand five hundred dollars. Department of instruction in mathematics: For surveyor’s compass, Departments fifty-eight dollars; chain, eight dollars; leveling-rod, sixteen dollars; °f£;‘;;,‘;';g;‘g‘éS_ measuring-tapes, twelve dollars; repairs to instruments, twenty dollars; textbooks for instructors, twenty dollars; in all, one hundred and thirty- four dollars. Artillery, cavalry, and infantry tactics: Tan—bark For riding-hall and T°*°*l°°· gymnasium, one hundred and fifty dollars; stationery for assistant instructors of tactics, one hundred dollars; furniture for offices of commandant and officer in charge, and the reception-room for visitors, three hundred dollars; for repairs and new apparatus for gymnasium, Eve hundred dollars; in all, one thousand and fifty dollars.