Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 20.djvu/134

 FORTYFIFTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. OH. 181. 1878. 109 For pay of adjutant, in addition to pay as first lieutenant, three hundred dollars: Provided, The sum paid to said officer shall not exceed one thousand eight hundred dollars per annum. I For pay of one master of the sword, one thousand five hundred dollars. For pay of cadets, one hundred and fifty thousand dollars; and no cadet shall receive more than at the rate of five hundred and forty dollars a year. For pay of the teacher of music, one thousand and eighty dollars. For pay of the Military Academy band, eight thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine dollars, which shall bein full for the pay of the said band for the year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and seventy- nine, any law to the contrary notwithstanding. For repairs and improvements, timber, plank, boards, joists, wall- Repairs rmd imstrips, laths, shingles, slate, tin, sheet-lead. nails, screws, locks, butts, P"°"°m°“*°· hinges, glass, paint, turpentine, oils, bricks, varnish, stone, lime, cement, plaster, hair, sewer and drain pipe, blasting-powder, fuse, iron, steel, tools, mantels, and other similar materials, and for pay of citizen mechanics and labor employed upon repairs that cannot be done by enlisted men, and for reilooring mineralogical and geological section-rooms, and repairing the same, also the drawing academy section-rooms, twelve thousand dollars. For fuel and apparatus, coal, wood, stoves, grates, furnaces, ranges, Fuel, etc. fire-bricks, and repairs of steam-heating apparatus. thirteen thousand dollars. For gaspipes, fixtures, lamp-posts, gas-lamps, gasometers, and retorts, Gas-pipes, etc. and annual repairs of the same, six hundred dollars. ‘ d For fuel for cadets’ mess-hall, shops, and laundry, three thousand FMI- ollars. For postage and telegrams, three hundred dollars. P<>¤t=¤g¤» etc- For stationery, blank books, paper, envelopes, quills, steel pens, rub- St¤ti<>¤¤¤‘y- bers, erasers, pencils, mu ilage, wax, and ink, six hundred dollars. For transportation of materials, discharged cadets, and ferriages, two Tr¤¤¤1><>rt¤ti¤¤ thousand dollars. For printing-type, materials for office, diplomas for graduates, regis- Printing, etc. ters, and blanks, five hundred dollars. For clerk to the disbursing-officer and quartermaster, one thousand Clerks. two hundred dollars. For clerk to adjutant, in charge of cadet records, one thousand two hundred dollars. For department of instruction in mathematics, namely: For measur- Department of ing-tapes, twelve dollars; cleaning and repairs of instruments, twenty- m°*h°m“*’°“· five dollars; textbooks and stationery for instructors, thirty dollars; one spirit-level, one hundred and twenty-tive dollars; marking-pins, Department of six dollars; plane-table, fifty dollars. artillery, ctc_ For department of artillery, cavalry, and infantry tactics, namely: For tan-bark for riding-hall and gymnasium, three hundred dollars; repairing camp-stools and camp furniture, fifty dollars; furniture for offices and reception-room for visitors, one hundred and fifty dollars; stationery for use of instructor and assistants, one hundred dollars; text books,fifty dollars; foils, masks, gloves, iencin g jackets, and repairs, one hundred dollars. For department of civil and military engineering: For models, maps, Department of purchase and repairs of instruments, text·books, books of reference, and <>¤z¤¤¤¤¤¤z- stationery for the use of instructors, and contingencies, five hundred dollars; for continuing preparation of textbooks for special instruction of cadets, five hundred dollars. _ For department of chemistry, mineralogy and geology: For chemicals, hD¤1?¤:tm¤t¤;t of including chemical apparatus, glass and porcelain ware, paper, wire, ° °““° ’Y· ° sheet—metal, ores, photographic materials, five hundred dollars; rough specimens, tiles, alcohol-lamps, blowpipes, pencils, and steel_and agate mortars, for practical instruction in mineralogy; for fossils illustrating