Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 17.djvu/520

 480 FOR'l.`Y—SECOND CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 210. 1873. ranges, fire—bricks, and repairs of steam-heating apparatus, fourteen thou. sand dollars. Gas-pipes, &c. For gas—pipes, gasdmeters, and retorts, and annual repairs of the same, six hundred dollars. For fuel for cadets' moss-hall, shops, and laundry, three thousand Eve hundred dollars. _ Postage, stm- For postage and telegrams, three hundred dollars. “°“""’Y· &°· For stationery, blank books, paper, envelopes, quills, steel pens, pencils, erasers, wax, and ink, five hundred dollars. Transportation. For 'transportation of materials, discharged cadets, and ferriages, one thousand five hundred dollars. For printing-type, materials for office, diplomas for graduates, registers, and blanks, seven hundred dollars. For compensation of pressmun and lithographer, one hundred dollars. Cl°*'k¤- For clerk to disbursing oilieer and quartermaster, one thousand six hundred and fifty dollars. For clerk to adjutzmt, one thousand five hundred dollars. For clerk to treasurer, one thousand five hundred dollars. _ Department of For department of instruction in mathematics, namely: For repairs of ‘“*§£`:5;;‘;;tics instruments, forty dollars; text-books, drawing materials, and stationery ' for instructors, thirty dollars. T¤¤¤¢¤· For department of artillery, cavalry, and infantry tactics, namely: For tan-bark for riding-hall and gymnasium, three hundred dollars; and for repairing apparatus for same, fifty dollars ; for repairing camp-stools, tents, and furniture, fifty dollars. Engineering. For department of civil and military engineering: For models, maps, repairs of instruments, text—bool<s, books of reference, and stationery for use of instructors, five hundred dollars. Drawing. For department of drawing: For models for free-hand drawing for second class, forty-five dollars ; mounting and framing the same, seventy- five dollars; architectural and topographical models for third class, forty dollars; mounting and framing the same, thirty dollars; tar-board for mounting models, fifteen dollars ; colors, paper, brushes, and pencils, twenty dollars. Ch¤mi¤¤'Y, &¢· For department of chemistry, inineralogy, and geology: For chemicals, including chemical apparatus, glass and porcelain ware, paper, wire, and sheet metal, and ores, nine hundred and seventy-five dollars, including material for practical instruction in photography; rough specimens, files, alcohol, lamps, blow-pipes, pencils, and agate mortars, for practical instruction in mineralogy and geology, two hundred and twe¤ty-five dollars; fossils illustrating the different rockformations, for daily use in sectionrooms, one hundred and seventy-five dollars ; gradual increase of the cabinet, five hundred dollars; repairs and improvements in electric, galvanio, magnetic, €l0Ctl`0··HlHg110lZlO, and magneto—elcctric apparatus, and additions to pneumatic and thermie apparatus, eight hundred dollars; carpenters’ and metal work, and materials for the same, sixty dollars ;_ pay of mechanic, to be employed in chemical and geological seotiomrooms, and in the lecture-room, one thousand and fifty dollars; completing repairs and improvements in laboratory, lecture-rooms, and mineralogical rooms, three hundred and ninety-five dollars ; models and diagrams, one hundred dollars; books of reference, text-books, and stationery, for use of instructors, and contingencies, two hundred and fifty dollars; compensation to attendant, fifty dollars. h§2g*gl· &°·¢ For department of natural und experimental philosophy: For instru- P P y` ments and apparatus to illustrate the laws of mechanics and of solids and fluids, three thousand dollars; instruments and apparatus to illustrate the laws of acoustics and optics, four thousand dollars ; instruments and apparatus to equip one field observatory, two thousand five hundred dollars; one break-circuit chronometer for mural-circle room in