Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 23.djvu/323

 FORTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 43, 45. 1885. 295 chusetts; Brooklyn, New York ; Annapolis, Maryland, and Mare Island, California; also straw for bedding for enlisted men at the various posts, and furniture i\—r Government houses; in all, twelve thousand five hundred dollars. At the Naval Asylum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: For superintend- Naval Asylum. ent, at the rate per annum of six hundred dollars; steward, at the rate per annum of four hundred and eighty dollars; matron, at the rate per annum of three hundred and sixty dollars; cook, at the rate per annum of two hundred and forty dollars; two assistant cooks, at the rate per annum of one hundred and sixty-eight dollars each; chief laundress, at the rate per annum of one hundred and ninety-two dollars; six laundresses, at the rate per annum of one hundred and sixty-eight dollars each; nine scrubbers and waiters, at the rate per annum of one hundred and sixty-eight dollars each; six laborers, at the rate per annum of two hundred and forty dollars each; stable-keeper and driver, at the rate per annum of three hundred and sixty dollars; master-at·arms, at the rate per annum of four hundred and eighty dollars; corporal, at the rate per annum of three hundred dollars; barber, at the rate per annum of three hundred and sixty dollars; carpenter, at the rate per annum of eight hundred and forty-five dollars; water-rent and gas, one thousand dollars; ice, one hundred dollars; car-tickets, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; cemetery and burial expenses, and headstones, one hundred and seventy-five dollars; improvement of grounds, two hundred and fifty dollars; repairs to buildings and preservation of all kinds, painting, and for grates, furnaces, ranges, furniture, and repairs of furniture, two thousand two hundred and fifty dollars; and for support of beneficiaries, twenty-one thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; in all, twentynine thousand nine hundred and six dollars and fifty cents, which sum shall be paid out of the income from the naval pension fund. Sec. 2. That all appropriations made by the act of July seventh, Balances of rmeighteen hundred and eighty-four, making temporary provisions for the tain spprvp rignaval service for the six months ending December thirty—iirst, eighteen *i,‘5“°f°m°d°a,°'“‘1‘ hundred and eighty-four, or any balances thereof that may be unex- fw? "mv °°"` pended at that date, be, and they are hereby, reappropriated, con- Pamphlet laws, tinued, and made available for the remainder of the iiscal year ending 48th Cong-. 1¤¢ June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-five. '°°°·· P·2°"· Sec. 3. That the Secretary of the Navy is hereby directed to report Secretary or to Congress, at its next and each regular session thereafter, the amount NNY d¤¢¤*·*d *0 expended during the prior fiscal year, from the appropriations for the '°7;’,‘:f:d“m,fE‘;t,f," pay of the Navy, Bureaus of Navigation, Urdnance, Equipment and 5:;,,, 6,,,,,,; wa, ,§ Recruiting, Yards and Docks, Medicine and Surgery, Provisions and payment of civil- Clothing Construction anh Repair, and Steam·Engineering, for civilians vmé :¤{¤Pl<>Y¤d <>¤ employed on clerical duty, or in any other capacity than as ordinary g;';;?,, dgggxg mechanics and workingmen, and to submit, under the estimates for pay for civilian Omof the Navy and for the respective Bureaus enumerated above, specific ployees for {mal estimates for such civilian employees for the fiscal year eighteen hun- Y°¤* 1887 nd dred and eighty-seven, and each fiscal year thereafter. °1‘°"’°f°°" Approved, January 30th, 1885. CHAP. 4 —-An act to release the reversion right of the Government of the United _ _ si:`a• ui mum ams ni me city omni and sms or micmgss, Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United State: of America in Congress uaamblcd That any right of reversion or Detroit, Mich. otherwise which the United States may be supposed to have in the space K¤i¤¤¤q to l><>•¤i on which the high-school building belonging to the board of education of :{,_f3:,?‘{f"é“é’::•W; the city of Detroit is situtated-being a part of the old town of Detroit, mu my ' laid out by the governor and judges of the Territory of Michigan under ING, vol. 4, ch. an act of Congress approved April twentydirst, eighteen hundred and 43. 1*-59- six, entitled “An act to provide for the adjustment of the titles of land