Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/658

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FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Srzss. III. C11. 29. 1895. 629 d Igor furniture for offices and reception room for visitors, one hundred 0 ars. . For stationery for use of instructor and assistant instructors of tactics, one hundred and fifty dollars _ ’ For books and maps, binding books, and mounting maps, seventy- flve dollars. . - For plumes for cadet officers of the first class, seventy-five dollars. For silk and worsted sashes for cadet officers and acting onicers, two hundred and twenty dollars. For foils, masks, belts, fencing gloves, and fencing jackets, gaiters, and repairs, two hundred and fifty dollars. For soap used in scrubbing cadet barracks, Jifty dollars. ` For department of civil and military engineering: For models, maps, Q·;gue¤¤¤¤¤ ¤€ mil purchase and repair of instruments, apparatus, drawing boards, desks, i:;. ""y°""`°°° . chairs, shelves, and cases for books and instruments, textbooks, books of reference and stationery for the use of instructors, and contingencies, one thousand dollars; d gay of one draftsman, one thousand dollars; in all, two thousand 0 ars For department of natural and experimental philosophy: For addi- ur£°g;p;°¤'g ¤g; tions to apparatus to illustrate the principles of mechanics, acoustics, ptn0S0pry¥° °° optics, and astronomy, eight hundred dollars; for books of reference, scientinc periodicals, text-books, stationery, materials, and repairs, . four hundred dollars; fo1‘ repairs to the observatory buildings, repairs to clocks, and fittings to new lecture room, three hundred dollars; for pay of mechanic assistant, one thousand dollars; in all, two thousand five hundred dollars. For department of instruction in mathematics, namely: For repairs m£,$01;;{,f:¤¤¤° 0* and materials for preservation of models and instruments, thirty-five ' dollars; for text-books, books of reference, binding, and stationery, one hundred and twenty- five dollars; for table of logarithms, twenty-five dollars; one drawing table, twenty-five dollars; one drawing board, five dollars; one steel ruler, five dollars; one steel triangle, five dollars; for contingencies, twentyfive dollars; in all, two hundred and fifty dollars. ` For department of history, geography, and ethics: For text-books, mPy°P*f;*‘°”*h°* gf; books of reference, maps and periodicals and repairing and rebinding ethics? mp y' same, and stationery for the use of instructors, one hundred and fifty dollars; for two thirty six-inch terrestrial globes for section rooms, at two hundred dollars each, four hundred dollars; in all, five hundred and fifty dollars. For department of chemistry, mineralogy, and geology: For chem- c,,B,;};;_;fu"§f,}‘f,,‘}{ icals, chemical apparatus, glass and porcelain ware. paper, wire, sheet my. nm! s¤¤1¤sy· metal, ores, photographic apparatus and materials, five hundred dollars. For rough specimens, fossils, and for apparatus and material to be ' used in the practical determinations of mineralogical and geological specimens, pencils and papers for the practical instructions in the same branches, and for gradual increase and improvement of the cabinet, tive hundred dollars. For repairs and additions to electric, magnetic, pneumatic, thermic, and optical apparatus, five hundred dollars: 'Provided, That any of the mbw above-named sums for the department of chemistry, miueralogy, and ' geology not expended for the purposes named, may be expended for _ iittings of the chemical rooms of the new Academy building. For pay of mechanic employed in chemical and geological section rooms and in lecture rooms, one thousand dollars. For models, maps, and diagrams, books of reference, text-books, and stationery for the use of instructors, one hundred and eighty dollars. For contin geucies, one hundred dollars. For department of drawing: For drawing material for the_ use of d2:£•r'¢¤·¤¤* ¤f instructors, tacks, sponges,brushes, glue, alcohol, hectograph tilhn g and g'