Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 17.djvu/195

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

FORTY—SECOND CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 196. 187 2. 155 For gas—pipes, gasometers, and retorts, and annual repairs of the same, Gas-pipes, &o. six hundred dollars. For fuel for cadets' mess-hall, shops, and laundry, three thousand five Fuel. hundred dollars. For postage and telegrams, two hundred dollars. Postage, &o. For stationery, blank-books, paper, envelopes, quills, steel pens, wax, and Stationery, ink, five hundred dollars. For transportation of materials, discharged cadets, and ferriages, one Transportation thousand two hundred dollars. For printing-type, materials for office, diplomas for graduates, registers, and blanks, seven hundred dollars. For compensation of lithographer, one hundred dollars. For clerk to disbursing officer and quartermaster, one thousand six hundred and fifty dollars. For clerk to adjutant, one thousand five hundred dollars. For clerk to treasurer, one thousand five hundred dollars. For department of instruction in mathematics, viz.: For plane-table, one Departments 0, hundred and seventy-five dollars; repairs of instruments, thirty dollars; i¤S*'¤°tl°¤- _ text-books and stationery for instructors, twenty dollars. MMh°mim°S' For department of artillery, cavalry, and infantry tactics, viz.: For tan- T¤<>¤<>S· bark for riding-hall and gymnasium, one hundred and fifty dollars ; stationery for assistant instructors, one hundred dollars; guidons, marker-flags, camp—colors, and embroidering colors for caps of cadets, fifty dollars; repairing camp—stools, tents, and furniture, five hundred dollars; foils, masks, gloves, and repairs for fencing, two hundred dollars. For department of civil and military engineering: For models, maps, E¤é§`i¤€€Fi¤g· repairs of instruments, and text-books and stationery for use of instructors, five hundred dollars. For department of natural and experimental philosophy: For chrono- Natural, &o., graph for observatory, one thousand dollars; two sextants, three hundred Phil°S°PhY· dollars; surveyor’s transit, two hundred and fifty dollars; barometer, fifty dollars; repairs and contingencies, five hundred dollars; compensation to attendant, fifty dollars. For department of drawing: For Turner's Liber-studiorum for the use Drawing. of the second class, one hundred and twenty dollars; topographical models, architectural models and ornaments, and models of machines, for the use of the third class, one hundred dollars; colors, brushes, pencils, and papers, for the use of instructors, ten dollars. For department of law and ethics : For books of reference, text-books, Law and and stationery, for the use of instructors, one hundred dollars. °*h‘“· For department of French: For text-books and stationery, for the use French. of instructors, fifty dollars. For department of Spanish: For text-books and stationery, for the use Spanish. of instructors, fifty dollars. For department of chemistry, mineralogy, and geology: For chemicals, Chemistry, including chemical apparatus, glass and porcelain ware, paper, wire, and &°· sheet-metal, five hundred and fifty dollars; material for practical instruction in photography, two hundred dollars; rough specimens, files, alcohol, lamps, blow-pipes, pencils, and agate mortars, for practical instruction in mineralogy and geology, one hundred and seventy-five dollars ; fossils illustrating the different rock formations, for daily use in section-rooms, one hundred and twenty-five dollars; gradual increase of the cabinet, five hundred dollars; repairs and improvements in electric, galvanic, magnetic, electro-magnetic, and magneto-electric apparatus, four hundred and fifty dollars ; repairs and additions to pneumatic and thermic apparatus, one hundred and fifty dollars; improved adjustable electric lamp, one hundred and fifty dollars ; carpenters’ and metal work, and materials for the same, sixty-five dollars ; improved binocular microscope, complete, three hundred dollars ; diagrams illustrating chemical and geological phenomena, one hundred and twenty-Eve