Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/187

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

158FIFTYTHIRD CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 167. 1894. for six hundred square feet of tile flooring for front hall way and lavatories; for rcoiling and relacquering material for hard-wood iloors; for two hundred feet of planed boards, one inch by sixteen inches, for shelving storeroom; for ten pounds of sal ammoniac to supply battery for electric bells; for nine feet of black—walnut counter, with marble top, for dispensary; for glass screen, with door, for dispensing counter; for steam radiator, with necessary fittings for ward number two, same as ward number one; for three medicine closets for wards; for wlntewashing basements throughout; for rebronzing radiators, water pipes, and so forth, throughout; for eight stationary lockers for hospital attendants; for twenty—iour stationary lockers, three sets of eight each, for patients; for necessary fixtures to connect soldiers’ hospital and subdispensary by telephone with the cadet hospital, two thousand seven hundred and eighty-eight dollars and seventy cents. _ s<>1<Hm’ lw¤rit¤r For improvements, additions, and repairs required at the sold1ers’ hospital, as follows: For fittings for one basement room for storeroom ‘ for liquors, disinfectants, and medicines requiring cold storage; for movable louver board shutters (outside) for sixty-nine windows in buildings, with the necessary hinges, fasteners, and turn-buckles; for Butcher’s “Boston" polish for floors; for one large galvanized iron sink, with drain shelf, for kitchen (to replace the one now in use, which is very small and not adapted to the requirements of the building); for rebronzing radiator and steam pipes in main building and annex; for repainting porches and covered way leading to annex; for repainting tin roof over all porches and covered way to annex; for hard·oil finish for windows, transoms, and interior woodwork of main building and annex, except floors; for whitewashing walls and ceilings in basements under main. building and annex; for repainting screen frames under porches, and for construction of roof over open stairway leading to isolation ward from covered way between main building and annex, one thousand two hundred and sixty-two dollars. For outbuilding at the soldiers’ hospital, with stalls for four cows, two hundred dollars. Soldiers smacks, For repairs and improvements to barracks of the detachment of °‘°· Army-service men, quartermastens department, and for steam plant for heating same, four thousand dollars. For improving the surface draining of married enlisted men’s quarters in Logtown, five hundred dollars. For painting the exterior of five double frame houses in Rugertown, used as quarters for married enlisted men, one thousand dollars. u»p¤1l·¤,un»¤¤wy, For repairs to ordnance laboratory, and so forth: New spouting on °‘°‘ all buildings, three hundred dollars; water-closets in laboratory yard, one hundred and seventyfive dollars. For covered way from cavalry stables to riding hall, a frame shedding built in sections and so constructed as to be put together and taken apart as desired, tour hundred dollars. For necessary paint, including cost of labor, for exterior of cavalry stable, four hundred and eighty dollars. For new mangers and general repairs to interior of cavalry stables, one thousand four hundred and sixty dollars. For building a breast-high masonry wall on east side of road from north gate to entrance of post cemetery, one thousand dollars. Sewer. For new sewer from Rugertown to connect with new sewer from new soldiers! hospital to river, two thousand eight hundred dollars. . For removing the piling of the old south wharf, five hundred dollars. For continuing repairs to road from south gate to the southern boundary line of reservation, and for continuing the laying of a stone walk along same, three thousand dollars. For improving and extending the present electric fire alarm system of the post, seven hundred dollars. For repairing fuel house belonging to the barracks of Company E, Battalion of Engineers, seventy-five dollars.