Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/265

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

236 FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Suss. ll. Ch. 228. 1894. . MISCELLANEOUS. H¤•1•i¢·¤1¤¤¤¤·¤¤¤- For pay of not exceeding one hundred hospital matrons. twelve . thousand dollars ; _ _ Veterinary m. For pay of not exceeding fourteen veterinary surgeons, thirteen gm" thousand dollars ; in all, twenty-five thousand dollars. !’•¥¤¤•*¤•;=*·**·· For pay of not exceeding thirty-five paymasters’ clerks, at one thoum°°°°"m’°sand four hundred dollars each; not exceeding thirty paymasters’ messengers, and traveling expenses of paymasters’ clerks and expert accountant of the Inspector-General’s Department, eighty thousand dollars. Grrk• wi ¤¤¤¤¤¤¤· For clerks and messengers at the headquarters of the Army and at the 5i' °° hmmm"' several department headquarters; at the recruiting headquarters and depots; at the Military Academy at West Point; at the Artillery School at Fort Monroe, Virginia ; at the Infantry and Cavalry School · at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and at the Cavalry and Light Artillery School at Fort Riley, Kansas, not exceeding ninety clerks, at one thousand dollars each; twenty-tive clerks at one thousand one hundred dollars each ; ten clerks, at one thousand two hundred dollars each, and forty-five messengers, at seven hundred and twenty dollars each, one hundred and iiity-two thousand eight hundred dollars; and said Arr·>¤¤¤¤=¤¤¤¢· clerks and inessengers shall be em ploycd and apportioned to the several Enuntment of sim- headquarters and stations by the Secretary of War. And the "Act §$1`“,$,"*°‘§,;Pl°' ”‘ for the enlistment and pay and to define the duties and liabilities of Wl- Eli- W- ‘ general-service clerks’ and ‘ general-service messen gers’ in the Army," approséeld July twenty-ninth, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, is hereby re al . °°"“·¤“’“•'· gear compensation of reporters and witnesses attending upon courtsmartial and courts of inquiry, five thousand seven hundred and eighty- _ _ five dollars and thirty-tive cents. _,f°*{}{{,l’“"“"'¤’· For additional pay to officer in charge of public buildings and ` grounds in Washington, District of Columbia, one thousand dollars. E"l’°" “°°°"”*“"*; For expert accountant for the Inspector-General’s Department, two _ thousand five hundred dollars. ,,,§‘}{';‘§,‘f"*"°“ _°f For commutation of quarters to commissioned officers on duty without troops, at stations where there are no public quarters, one hun- Mm M0m_mn dred and sixty-five thousand dollars. mm .°C3¤i. For pay of a clerk attendant on the collection and classification of military information from abroad, one thousand five hundred dollars. ,,,;E,'§’f,{:,,“f’“·°‘°··°“' For allowance for travel, retained and detained pay, clothing not drawn, and {hr interest on deposits, payableto enlisted men on dis- _ charge, seven hundred and eighty-eight thousand two hundred and nine ggmggmn M. d6_ dollars and thirty-three cents: Provided, That hereafter sums known as ltiusrilmy. detained pay, which have already been or may hereafter be withheld from the monthly pay of enlisted men of the Army in obedience to court-martial sentences, shall, when repaid, become a charge against the fund “pay of the Army" for the year in which said enlisted men _ _ _ have been or may be discharged. “’*‘““>’ P"”°“- For additional pay to officer commanding the military prison at Fort M_] Y t m Leavenworth, Kansas, five hundred dollars. "’“’~° " " °*’"· For mileage to oiilcers when traveling on duty without troops. when authorized by law, not to exceed one hundred and fortv thousand dol- A“"*"’°'**· lars to be allotted hy the Secretary of War to the War Department and to the several military departments; and not more than threelifths of said amount shall be expended during the first half of the _ ‘ iiscal year and not more than one-half of the remainder during each of mh mom the remaining quarters: Provided, That hereafter the maximum sum •¤=··- to be allowed and paul to any officer of the Army shall be four cents per mile, distance to be computed over the shortest usually traveled routes, and in addition thereto the cost of the transportation actually paid by the officer over said route or routes, exclusive of parlor-car or 0¤¤¤b¤mi¤m¤»m». sleeping-car fare and transfers: And provided further, That when any