Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 24.djvu/191

 156 FORTY-NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 781. 1886. Contingent ox- For contingent expenses, Naval Academy: For purchase of books · P°“““°· b°°k”¤ °“" for the library, two thousand dollars. °°°°ry’ °t°' For stationery, blank-books, models, maps, and for text books for use of instructors, two thousand dollars. Board of Vioi- For expenses of the Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy, one diem for each member for expenses during actual attendance at the Academy. _ Chemicals, etc. For purchase of chemicals, apparatus, and instruments m the department of physics and chemistry, and for repairs of the same, two thousand five hundred dollars. _ _ Miscellaneous. For purchase of gas and steam machinery, steam-p1pe and fittings, rent of building for the use of the Academy, freight, cartage, water, music, musical and astronomical instruments, uniforms for the bandsmen, telegraphing, for feed and maintenance of teams, for current expenses and repairs of all kinds, and for incidental labor and expenses not applicable to any other appropriation, thirty-two thousand dollars. For stores in the department of steam-engineering, eight hundred dollars. For materials for repairs in steam-machinery, one thousand dollars. Head-stones for For head-stones for the graves of sixty sailors and marines buried in ¤¤U<>¤¤¤·¤d¤¤¤fi¤¢¤ the naval cemetery at the Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland, who 1°“ °“ “‘° H'“`°“· lost their lives by being wrecked in the United States steamer Huron, tive hundred dollars. Naval observe.- For commencing the erection of the new Naval Observatory on the tom site purchased under the act of Congress approved February fourth, 0,gg:“",;‘:,‘}3§;“°“° eighteen hundred and eighty, fifty thousand dollars: Provided, That Vol. 21, ,,_ 6,5 the construction of no building shall be commenced except an observa- Pmmo. tory proper, with necessary offices for observers and computers. Marine Corps. MARINE CORPS. Roy of oiloors, For pay of officers on the active-list, as follows: For one colonel com- one paymaster, one quartermaster, four majors, two assistant quartermasters, one judge-advocategeneral United States Navy, nineteen cap~ tains, thirty iirst lieutenants, and nineteen second lieutenants, one hundr·ed and eightyone thousand two hundred and sixty-flve dollars. Ogcem, mma For pay of oilieers on the retired-list: For one colonel, one quarterlist. master, three majors, two assistant quartermasters, four captains, one iirst lieutenant, and three second lieutenants, thirty-one thousand two hundred and ninety dollars. N°¤.cqmm5,.nm. For pay of non—commissioned officers, musicians, and privates: For od oiioorn. pri- one sergeantmajor, one quartermastensergeant, one leader of the band, "**°’• °*°· one drum·major, fifty iirst sergeants, one hundred and forty sergeants, one hundred and eighty corporals, thirty musicians, ninety-six drummers and iifers, and one thousand five hundred privates, three hundred and eighty-nine thousand and fifty~two dollars., Clerks, etc. For pay of civil force, namely: For ten clerks and two messengers, sixteen thousand and thirty-tive dollars; payments to discharged soldiers for clothing undrawn, twenty thousand dollars; transportation of ofticers traveling under orders without troops, eight thousand dollars; commutation of quarters for officers on duty where there are no public quarters, four thousand dollars; in all, forty-eight thousand and thirty- tive dollars. Provision. For provisions for the Marine Corps, and for difference between cosu of rations and commutation thereof for detailed men,sixty-two thousand five hundred dollars. Clothing. For clothing, fifty thousand dollars. Fuel. For fuel, eighteen thousand dollars. Military stores. For military stores, namely: For pay of one chief armorer, at three dollars per day; three mechanics, at two dollars and fifty cents each
 * °'°- thousand five hundred dollars, being for mileage and five dollars per
 * °*“`° lm- mandant, one colonel, two lieutenant-colonels, one adjutant and inspector,