Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 32 Part 1.djvu/481

 FIFTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 1300. 1902. 415 used. in the practical determinations of mineralogical and geological specimens, pencils and paper for the practical instructions in the same branches, and for gradual increase and improvement of the cabinet, five hundred dollars; For repairs and additions to electric, magnetic, pneumatic, thermic, and optical apparatus, nine hundred dollars; Models, maps, and diagrams, books of reference, textbooks, and stationery for the use of instructors, one hundred and eighty dollars; · For benches or chairs, and raised platform to support the same, fO1‘ chemical lecture room, three hundred and twenty-five dollars; Contingencies, one hundred dollars; For department of drawing: For drawing material for use of drQ‘$,Ql°"“’€"* 0* instructors, tacks, Sponges, brushes, glue, alcohol, tumblers, saucers, g` tloyviels, soap, ink, stationery, and contingent expenses, three hundred V o ars; For repairs to models, desks, stretchers, racks, stands, and materials, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; Photographic material for enlarging room and general photographic work, two hundred and fifty dollars; For slides and apparatus for lectures, fifty dollars; For books and periodicals on art, architecture, and technology, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; Frames for retained drawings of cadets and wall models, fifty dollars; For binding periodicals, loose sheets of maps, books, and so forth, fifty dollars; ` For six oak stands eight feet long, eighty-four dollars; For fifteen new drawing desks, one iliundred and fifty-two dollars and twenty-five cents; For thirty new stools, twenty-two dollars and fifty cents; For twenty-five reconnoissance boards, one hundred and fifty-eight dollars and seventy-tive cents; For forty-five celluloid reconnoissance rulers, forty-five dollars; For thirty steel triangles, thirty-seven dollars and fifty cents; For forty steel straightedges, one hundred and twenty dollars; For ten hand levels, forty-tive dollars; For additional book shelves in office for accommodation of increase in books, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; · For additional oak chests of drawers for maps, charts, plans, and cadets’ drawings, three hundred dollars; For six additional compasses for reconnoissance sketching boards, to be immediately available, twenty-eight dollars and thirty-tive cents; For department of modern languages: For stationery, text·books, m[Q§{,’*;?5Q\§‘g;°*m°d‘ and books of reference for use of instructors, for repairs of books and " apparatus and foroffice furniture, and for printing examination papers, and for contingencies, four hundred and fifteen ollars; For department of law and history: F or stationery, text-books, and ,,,?,°}{};§Q,‘Q§f" °* ‘”“' books of reference for the use of instructors, maps, map fixtures, fur ` niture, and for repairs to the same, four hundred dollars; For department of practical military engineering: For purchase and ,,Q?,‘§’p°;f$§§‘f,?‘§f,“,;§j repair of instruments: transportation; purchase of tools, implements, ¤€€¤i¤8· and materials, and for extra-duty pay of engineer soldiers, as follows, namely: For instruments for use in instructing cadets in making reconnoissances; photographic apparatus and material for field photography; drawing instruments and material for platting reconnoissances; surveying instruments; instruments and material for signaling and iield telegraphy; transportation of field parties; tools and material for the preservation, augmentation, and repair of wooden pontoon, and one canvas pontoon train: sapping and mining tools and material; rope; cordage; material for rafts and for spar and trestle bridges; intrench— ing tools; tools and material for the repair of Fort Clinton and the