Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/345

 SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. II. Crr. 174. 1910. 32]. For supplies for recitation rooms not otherwise provided for and for renewing and repairing furniture in same, six hundred dollars; Increase and expense of library, namely: L“"“”'· For purchase, preservation, care, storage, binding and repair of books, periodicals, pamphlets, maps, pictures, and manuscripts; purchase of furniture, cases, stationery, and fittings; for ex enses of making copies of military manuscripts in other libraries, and for contingent expenses not otherwise provided for; purchases to be made in Span market on the written order of the supermtendent, ten thousand o ars; · _ For contingent funds, to be expended rmder the direction of the d,E{,’§*§'},,$°}§P "°°' academic board: For instruments, books, repairs toapparatus, and gtlher incidental expenses not otherwise provided for, one thousand o ars; _ Provided, That all technical and scientific suyilplies for the depart- ·{?§‘,‘}'{;,,1,u,,,1i,,s_ ments of instruction of the Military Academy s all be purchased by contract or otherwise, as the Secretary of War may deem best. Purchase of instruments for band and repairs to same; for purchase M“Sl°“* s“PP“°& of reeds, ads, strings, and other materials necessary for brass, wood, wind, and) string instruments; for purchase of music stands and other equipments; for purchase of music for military band and orchestra and for extra parts; all to be purchased in open market on order of sugrintendent, one thousand ve hundred dollars; · epairs and improvements to the laundry machinery and appa- e,f,j“‘md’Y· "“°h°°• ratus in the cadet aundry, and the purchase of new material, tools and so forth to be expended without advertising, one thousand eigllgt hundred dollars; ‘ epair of cooki.r§ utensils, chairs, tables, and other fumiture in the cadet mess, an the replacement of same, including a new dishwashing machine, to be e ended without advertising, one thousand seven hundred and fifty dbxilars; For the policing of barracks and bath houses, eight thousand four P°“°“"· hundred dollars; For srépplying light and plain furniture to cadets’ barracks, three ,,§{,‘},,$‘,,‘@;‘f"°°"’·'“‘“ thousan six hundred dollars; For maintaining the children’s school, the Superintendent of the °"“""°“" '°"°°‘· Military Academy being authorized to employ the necessary teachers, three thousand five hundred and twengy ollars; _ Prmrided That section thirty-six hundre and forty-eight, Revised {,°Q‘,Z,"',,f,‘§;.,,,_ Statutes, shall not apply to subscriptions for foreign, professional, R·S··¤¤¢-8¢¤8·v·718· and other newspapers and periodicals, to be paid for from any of the foregoing appropriations. avrrnmcs Arm eaomvns. g,f,’§,},}f‘°” °“" For cases, materials, fittings, fixtures, and other a liances and °'}§°§‘9f’e{',·§f"°“‘“· Beplairs for ordnance museum in academy building, thlfee hundred mm my _ o ars; For repairs to ordnance laboratory and other buildings pertaining to the department of ordnance and gunnery, and materials for roads gag walks, and for repairs to machinery and tools, four thousand o ars; For general repairs to the cadet laundry building, and for emergency incidental expenses about building, to be expended without advertising, four hundred dollars; For general incidental repairs and improvements to the cadet store bu1ldi%, including storerooms, office, tailor shops, and shoe-repairing shops, ve hundred dollars; - For materials and labor for re airs, alterations, and additions S°1°*°"'° °°”’"‘1‘ needed at the soldiers’ hospital, as fhllows: