Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 33 Part 1.djvu/536

 448 FIFTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. ll. Ch. 1760. 1904. preservation, augmentation, and repair of wooden pontoon and one canvas pontoon train; sapping and mining tools an material; rope; cordage; material for rafts and for spar and trestle bridges; intrenching tools; tools and material for the repair of Fort Clinton and the batteries of the academy, and for extra- uty pay of engineer soldiers, at fifty cents per day each, when performing special skilled mechanical labor in the department of practical military engineering; for models, books of reference, and stationery, and for extra pay of one engineer soldier as assistant in photographic laboratory, and in charge of photograaphic laboratorv, photograp ic apparatus, materials, and supplies, at fty cents per day, two thousand ollars; ,,,I:,°,,'f,“,{f.'I;’§,,?,'fl' For department of ordnance and gunnery: For purchase and repair of instruments, models, and apparatus, and purchase of necessary material; for the purchase of samples of arms and accouterments other than those supplied to the military service; for books of reference, textbooks, stationery, and lithoignphic printing materials, and for contingencies, four hundred and ity dollars; h Fgr plugcgase of ammunition for rapid-iire gums now on hand, three - un re dollars; For manufacture or purchase of models of breech mechanisms of cannon, rapid—iire guns, small arms, and the various machines and tools _ lipd  manufacture, for cadet instruction, one thousand two un 0 rs; ‘·°°*“‘°“- For a course of lectures for the more complete instruction of cadets, one thousand two hundred dollars; _ In all, for current and ordinary ex enses, one hundred and live . thousand one hundred and eighty-one dlbllars and fifty cents. Miscellaneousitems MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS AND INCIDENTAL EXPENSES. and mcrdental ex- - _ mjljgiim c,,,,,,,,,,;,,; For the printing lg the Public Printer of six thousand copies of the Egtgglyfi Mllimy Jubilee Centennial istory of the United States Military Academy, one thousand of which shall be for the use of the Senate and two thousand for the use of the House of Representatives, and the balance to be distributed by the Superintendent of the United States Military Academy under the direction of the Secretary of War, five thousand ‘ five hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary. s¤am>n¤ry.¤¤¤. For stationery, bindi, commercial eriodrcals, and so forth, for office of the treasurer,!United States Military Academy, as follows: Blank books, paper, envelopes, pens, mucilage, typewrrting supplies and repairs, and other items of stationery; for binding orders, circulars, and so forth, and for commercial eriodicals, journals, and market repor·ts, one hundred and eighty dollars; For bookcase for keeping records, orders, and books of reference in th; pfhce of the treasurer, United States Military Academy, thirty- five dollars; For stationery for office of commissary of cadets, namely: Record books, blank books, paper for printin menus, laundry lists, and so fiorthl, ipvelopes, pens, mucilage, and other items of stationery, twenty- ve dollars; ' I-*¤h““¤· For gas-coal oil, candles, lanterns, matches, chimneys, and wicking for ligl ting the academ building, chapel, library, cadet barracks, mess all, shops, hospital; offices, stables and riding hall, sidewalks, camp, and wharfs, ten thousand dollars; i For water pipe, plumbing, and repairs, five thousand dollars; d Fcppl clpaning public buildings (not quarters), two thousand five hunre dollars; For soap, lye, sapolio, buckets, scrubbing brushes, mops, dust ans, brooms, feather dusters. and other similar articles and material; for policing public buildings (not quarters), one thousand dollars; For chalk, crayons, sponges, slate, rubbers, rulers, pointers, card,