Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 35 Part 1.djvu/790

 SIXTIETH CONGRESS. Sess. II. C11. 255. 1909. 773 steam machinery, steam pipes and fittings, rent of buildings for the use of the academy, commutation of rent for bandsmen, at eight dollars per month each, cartage, water, music, musical and astronomical instruments, uniforms for the bandsmen, feed and maintenance of teams, current expenses, and re airs of all kinds, and for incidental labor and explenses not applicablb to any other appropriation, sixty thousand dollars; stores, stationery, periodicals, materials, apparatus, machinery, tools, and fittings, for use in the department 0 marine engineering and naval construction, for purposes of instruction ;_ repairs of apparatus, tools,—and machinery, care and cleaning of building and its eguipment, and for all other necessary purposes, twelve thousand ve hundred dollars; for contingencies for the superintendent of the academy, to be expended in his discretion, two thousand dollars; apparatus for the instruction of midshipmen m the various academic departments, fifteen thousand dollars; for care of rifle range, one thousand two hundred and seventy-seven Care or memenm, dollars and four cents; for the installation, care, preservation, and °‘°· display of memorial and other objects of historic interest and value at the Naval Academy, ten thousand dollars; in all, one hundred and ten thousand seven hundred and seventy-seven dollars and four cents. In all, Naval Academy, five hundred and thirty-four thousand two hundred and ninety-three dollars and twenty-two cents. The crypt and window spaces of the United States Naval Academy Use of crm and chapel are to be used only for memorials to United States naval offi— l{£l§,Y” °f °h"°1'°` cers who have successfully commanded a fleet or uadron in battle, or who have received or may receive the thanks ofstlhe Congress of the United States for conslpicuously distinguished services in time of war, and no memorial sha be accepted for or installed in said cphypt or window spaces until at least five years after the death of the officer in question: Provided, That nothing in this provision shall be considered mm as invalidating any agreement made by the present or any former m§`,',“;1“’f,,',{,,‘{*,,§l° "‘°‘ superintendent of the Taval Academy, authorizing a memorial window in the old Naval Academy chapel to be transferred to the new Naval Academy chapel. MARINE cones. M¤¤¤¤¤<>¤‘¤¤~ PAY, Mmmm Cours: For pay and allowances prescribed by law gggm of officers on the active list, nine hundred and fifteen thousand one ` hundred and twenty-two dollars. , For pay of officers prescribed by law, on the retired list: For one “°“’°°“•*· maj or-general, eight brigadier-generals, two colonels, seven lieutenantcolonels, nine majors, seven captains, eleven first lieutenants, and four second lieutenants, and for officers who may be placed thereon durinv the year, including such increased pay as is now or may hereafter he rovided for retired officers regularly assigned to active duty, one hundred and forty-nine thousand six hundred and twenty dollars. Pay of enlisted men, active list: Pay of noncommissionec officers, mimeu mm. musicians, and privates, as prescribed by law; and the number of enlisted men shall be exclusive of those undergoing imprisonment with sentence of dishonorable discharge from the service at expiration of such confinement, and for the ex enses of clerks of the United States Marine (‘orps traveling under ornllers, and including additional compensation for enlisted men of the Marine Corps regularly detailed as gun pointers, mess sergeants, cooks, messmen, signalmen, or holding good—conduct medals, pins, or bars, including interests on deposits by enlisted men, and the authorized travel allowance of discharged enlisted men and for prizes for excellence in gunnery exercise and target practice, both afloat and ashore, two million eight hundred and seventy-two thousand two hundred and seventy dollars: Provided, That no part of the appropriations herem made Prvriw-