Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 29.djvu/405

 FIFTY-FOURTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 399. 1896. 375 PAY OF WATCHIVIEN, MECHANICS, AND OTHERS, NAVAL ACADEMY:. WQ*°l¤¤¤¤·¤*°*·=*¤· For the captain of the watch and weigher, at two dollars and fifty cents mm c` ' per diem; four watchmen, at two dollars per diem each; foreman of gas and steam-heatin g works of the Academy, at five dollars per diem; for labor at gas works and steam buildings, for masons, carpenters, and other mechanics and laborers, and for care of buildings, grounds, wharves, and boats, thirty-seven thousand eight hundred and sixty- four dollars and ninety-tive cents; one attendant in purifying house of the gas house, at one dollar and fifty cents per diem; in all, forty-four thousand and sixty-nine dollars and ninety-five cents. PAY or STEAM EMI>LoYEEs, NAVAL ACADEMY: For pay of E,,Q§‘,§},‘;§,‘j§“· “°°"’ mechanics and others in department of steam engineering, seven thou- ` sand eight hundred and twenty-four dollars and fifty cents. REPAIRS AND IMPROVEMENTS, NAVAL ACADEMY: Necessary R°P‘**'°·°*°· repairs of public buildings, pavements, wharves, and walls inclosing the grounds of the Naval Academy, improvements, repairs, furniture and fixtures, twenty-one thousand dollars; continuing the grading and Q,re4i;s·¤¤¤· improvement of the property condemned under Act making appropria— ° 'Z ’°‘ S21` tions for the naval service for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and ninety, and the adjacent ground, and for the improvement of the water front of the Academy, to be immediately available, fifteen thousand dollars; necessary dredging along the river front of Naval Academy, to be immediately available, five thousand dollars; constructing main sewer and connections, ufteen thousand S”“'°'· dollars; in all, fifty-six thousand dollars. HEATING AND LIGHTING NAVAL AcADEMY: Fuel, and for heating F¤<=>1¤¤·1 and lighting the Academy and school-ships, twenty thousand dollars. O0NTINGEN·r, NAVAL ACADEMY: Purchase of books for the library, Contingenttwo thousand dollars; stationery, blank books, models, maps, and textbooks for use of instructors, two thousand dollars; expenses of the Board of Visitors of the Naval Academy, being mileage and five Bmd ·>*“Vi¤i¤¤¤· dollars per diem for each member for expenses during actual attendance at the Academy, one thousand five hundred dollars; purchase of chemicals, apparatus, and instruments in the department of physics and chemistry, and for repairs of the same, two thousand dollars; purchase of gas and steam machinery, steam pipes and fittings, rent of buildings for the use of the Academy, freight, cartage, water, music, musical and astronomical instruments, uniforms for the bandsmen, telegraphing, feed and maintenance of teams, current expenses, and repairs of all kinds, and for incidental labor and expenses not applicable to any other appropriation, thirty-two thousand dollars; stores in the departments of steam engineering, eight hundred dollars; materials for repairs in steam machinery, one thousand dollars; one portrait of the fourteenth Superintendent of the Naval Academy, one hundred dollars; one steam fire engine to replace one condemned by survey, four thousand dollars; for contingencies for the Superintendent of the Academy, one thousand dollars; in all, forty-six thousand four hundred dollars. MARINE 'CORPS. M¤ri¤•¤ Corps- PAY, MARINE Conrs: For pay of officers on the active list: For one m};°,{“*jf °*“°°”· “°· colonel commandant, one colonel, two lieutenant-colonels, one adjutant and inspector, one paymaster, one quartermaster, four majors, two assistant quarterinasters, twenty captains, thirty itlrst lieutenants, and thirteen second lieutenants, one hundred and eighty thousand eight hundred and sixty dollars. Pay of officers on the retired list: For two colonels, two lieutenant- R¤¤¤¤·i ·>*¤<=·>¤‘¤· colonels, one adiutant and inspector, thirteen captains, two first lieutenants, and three second lieutenants, forty-seven thousand three hundred and ninety-two dollars and nity cents. Pay of noncommissioned officers, musicians, and privates: For one Envntnd nwnsergeant-major, one quartermaster-sergeant, one leader of the band,