Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 21.djvu/365

 FORTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 73. 1881. 335 chief laundress, one hundred and ninety-two dollars· six laundresses, at one hundred and sixty-eight dollars each; nine scrubbers and waiters, at one hundred and sixtyeiglit dollars each; six laborers, at two hundred and forty dollars each; stablekeeper and driver, three hundred and sixty dollars; master-at-arms, four hundred and eighty dollars; corporal, three hundred dollars; barber, three hundred and sixty dollars; carpenter, eight hundred and forty-five dollars; water—rent and gas, two thousand dollars; ice, two hundred dollars; car-tickets, two hundred and fifty dollars; cemetery and burial expenses, headstones and digging graves, three hundred and fifty dollars; improvement of grounds, five hundred dollars; repairs and preservation of all kinds, painting, and for grates, furnaces, ranges, furniture, and repairs of furniture, four thousand five hundred dollars; and for support of beneficiaries forty- Bonoiiomies. three thousand five hundred dollars; in all, fifty-nine thousand eight FHM- hundred and thirteen dollars; which sum shall be paid out of the income from the naval pension fund. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. For support of the medical department, for surgeons’ necessaries for Su¤·goons’ necesvessels in commission, navy-yards naval stations, Marine Corps, and *’*“`*°S· Coast Survey, forty-five thousand dollars. For the naval-hospital fund, namely: For maintenance of the naval llospitaifiind. hospitals at Portsmouth, New Hampshire; Chelsea, Massachusetts; Brooklyn, New York; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Annapolis, Mary- land; Washington, District of Columbia; Norfolk, Virginia; Pensacola, (Elorida; Mare Island, California; and Yokohama, Japan, fifty thousand ollars. For contingent expenses of the bureau: For freight on medical stores; Contingent. transportation of insane patients to the government hospital; advertising; telegraphing; purchase of books; expenses attending the medical board of examiners; purchase and repair of wagons and harness; purchase and feed of horses and cows; trees, garden-tools, and seeds, fifteen thousand dollars. For necessary repairs of naval laboratory, naval hospitals, and Repairs. appendages, including roads, wharves, out-houses, sidewalks, fences, gardens, farms, and cemeteries, thirty thousand dollars. For the maintenance of the civil establishment at the several naval Civil ¢¤‘¤¤l>li¤l¤- hospitals, navy-yards, naval laboratory, and Naval Academy, forty “‘°"*· thousand dollars. For continuing investigations of atmospheric impurities, one thousand I¤¤v<>¤¤is=»U<>¤3S of five hundred dollars. ”“"l°?Ph""’ ‘"" purities. BUREAU OF PROVISIONS AND CLOTHING. _ For provisions for the seamen and marines; commuted rations for ]P{9vi¤i<>*jS wl officers, seamen, and marines; expenses of the handling and transpor- mQ,};“§;,f‘“'*“l’°" tation of provisions; of inspections and storehouses; and for purchase ’ ` of water for ships, and for provisions and commutation of rations for seven hundred and fifty boys, one million two hundred thousand dollars. For contingent expenses: Forfreight onshipments(exceptprovisions), Contingent excandles, fuel; books and blanks; stationery; advertising and com- I>¤¤S0S· missions on sales; forcign postage, telegrams, and express charges; toll, ferriages, and car-tickets; and yeoinen’s stores, iron safes, ice, newspapers, and incidental expenses absolutely necessary, sixty thousand ollars. · For civil establishment, twelve thousandfbur hundred and eleven Civil ¤¤wl>U¤l¤· dollars and fifty cents. m°nI°' BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. . For preservaton of vessels on the stocks and in ordinary, purchase Pr¢¤<>fv=1»fi<>¤ Of of materials and stores of all kinds; labor in navy-yards and on foreign ""”°1*’· °"°·