Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 31.djvu/703

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FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 792. 1900. 651 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, to he hung in gallery of the Academy, fifty dollars; For binding lbooks and periodicals and loose sheets, forty dollars; Twenty reconnaissance sketching boards, at four dollars and fifty cents each, ninety dollars; For department of modern languages: For stationery, text-books, mQd•;I;1g{;g¤¢¤¢ Of and books of reference for use of instructors, for repairs of books and g°ag°S' apparatus and for office furniture, and for printing examination papers, an for contingencies, three hundred and fifty do lars; For the purchase of one omce desk for the office of the Department, thirty dollars; For department of law and history: For stationery,. text-books, and au%€g§g§g€¤¤ 0* MW books of reference for the use of instructors, maps, map fixtures, l` furniture, and for repairs to the same, four hundred dollars; For department of practical military engineering: For purchase and p,§c§,1;;,’{n*g;§t;¤jy egf repair of instruments; transportation; purchase of tools, implements; sinecring. and materials, and for extra-duty pay of engineer soldiers, as follows, _ namely: For instruments for use in instructing cadets in making recongr naissances; photographic apparatus and material for field photography;“`” drawing instruments and material for platting reconnaissances; survey- ing instruments; instruments and material for signaling and fic d telegraphy; transportation of field parties; tools an 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 an for spar and trestle bridges; intrenching tools; tools and material for the repair of Fort C inton and the batteries of the Academy, and extra-duty 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—duty pa I of one engineer soldier (iirst sergeant) as assistant in photographic laboratory, and in charge of photographic laboratory, photogra hic ap aratus, mategiaigs, and supplies, at fifty cents per day, one thousand) two hundred o ars; For department of ordnance and gunnery: For purchase and repair m£$:l;¤*‘¤§¢¤¢ ¤f Mdof instruments, models, and apparatus, and purchase of necessary an g°mmy° material; for .the purchase of samples of arms and accouterments other than those supplied to the military service; for books of reference, text·books, stationery, and lithographic printing materials, and for contingencies, four hundred and fifty dollars; , For purchase of ammunition for rapid-hre guns now on hand, three hundred dollars; For manufacture or purchase of models of breech mechanisms of cannon, rapid-fire guns, small arms, and the various machines and tools used in their manufacture, for cadet instruction, one thousand five hundred dollars; In all, for current and ordinary expenses, seventy-nine thousand one hundred and thirty dollars. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS AND INCIDENTAL EXPENSES. m£fi¤e~gégg§gt¤$iw;§ DGIISBB. For stationery for office of the treasurer, United States Military · Academy, namely: Blank books, pa(per, envelopes, pens, mucilagp, tlyplewriting supplies and repairs, an other items of stationery, fi y 0 ars;