Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 21.djvu/117

 FORTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 73. 1880. 87 health and comfort of the Navy, and not to be more expensive to the government than the present ration, provided the same shall be acceptable to the men. In the event the Secretary of the Navy orders such substitution he is authorized to have sold at public auction any desiccated potatoes on hand, the proceeds of which sale shall be used in the purchase of desiccated tomatoes for the use of the Navy. For contingent expenses: For freight on shipments, except provisions Contingent excandles, fuel; books and blanks; stationery; advertising and commis? P°¤¤¤¤· sions on sales; foreign postage, telegrams, and express charges; toll, ferriages, and car-tickets; and yeomen’s stores, iron safes, ice, newspapers, and incidental expenses absolutely necessary, sixty thousand o ars. For civil establishment, twelve thousand four hundred and eleven eivn establishdollars and fifty cents. - ment BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. For preservation of vessels on the stocks and in ordinary, purchase of C onstruction materials and stores of all kinds; labor in navy-yards and on foreign mid *°P¤iistations; preservation of materials; purchase of tools; wear tear, and repair of vessels afloat, and for general care and protection of the Navy in the line of construction and repair; and incidental expenses, namely, advertising and foreign postage, one million five hundred thousand dollars. For the civil establishment, forty thousand one hundred and five dol- Civil <¤¤tei>ii¤h· lars and seventy-five cents. m"“°· BUREAU OF STEAM-ENGINEERING. For repairs and preservation of machinery and boilers in vessels on the _ Si·>¤¤¤·¤¤sin•‘¤¤¤‘- stocks and in ordinary; purchase and preservation of all materials and “‘g· stores; purchase, iitting, and repair of machinery and tools in the navy- yards and stations · wear, tear, and repair of machinery and boilers of naval vessels; incidental expenses, such as foreign postages,te1egrams, advertising, freight, eight hundred thousand dollars. _ _ For contingencies, such as instruments and materials for drafting- Contingent exroom, one thousand dollars. . _ _ _ P°”?°?‘ For the civil establishment, twenty thousand and thirty-eight dollars. mgyil establish- NAVAL ACADEMY. ' For pay of professors and others; For two professors (heads of depart- Nagel Academy. ments), namely: one of drawing and one of modern languages, at two mt;g,;¤¤°§S6ic,;,;· thousand ive hundred dollars each; four professors, namely: one of clerkmgmsongm; physics (assistant), 0110 of G]1€Ir1lSU‘y_ (9·S lSl33¤I1li), Om? of SDHJUSII (CSSISU laborers, and inuant), and one of English studies, history, and law (assistant), at two swwms. thousand two hundred dollars each; six assistant professors, namely: four of French, one of English studies, history, and laws, and one of drawing, at one thousand eight hundred dollars each; swordmaster, at one thousand five hundred dollars, and two assistants, at one thousand dollars each; boxing-master and gymnast, at one thousand two hundred dollars; and assistant librarian, at one thousand four hundred dollars; secretary of the Naval Academy, one thousand eight hundred dollars; three clerks to superintendent, at one thousand two hundred dollars, one thousand dollars, and eight hundred dollars respectively; one clerk to commandant of cadets, one thousand dollars; one clerk to paymaster, one thousand dollars; one dentist, one thousand six hundred dollars; one baker, six hundred dollars; one mechanic in department of physics and chemistry, six hundred dollars; one messman, two hundred and eighty-eight dollars; one cook, three hundred and twenty-five dollars and fifty cents; one messenger to superintendent, six hundred dollars; one armorer, five hundred and twenty-nine dollars and fifty cents; one gunner’s mate, four hundred and sixty-nine dollars and ilfty cents, and