Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 34 Part 1.djvu/1222

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

1192 FIF1`Y—NINTH CONGRESS. SEss. II. CII. 2512. 1907. the dead; advertising, telegraphing, rent of telephones, purchase of books and stationery, binding of medical records, unbound books, and pamphlets; postage and_ purchase of stamps for foreign service; ygienic and sanitary Investigation and illustration; sanitary an hygienic instruction; purchase and repairs of wagons and harness; purchase of and feed for horses and cows; trees, plants, garden tools and seeds; furniture and incidental articles for the museum of hygiene and department of instruction,Nnav?1Alisplensary, (?’l‘ashIngt<};n, nayal laboratorv sick uarters at ava ca emy an marine arrac s, surgeons; hilices and dispensaries at navy—yards and_naval stations, surge0ns’ quarters at naval hospitals; washing for medical department agzrmpseum of hygiprielapd gepartmint of ipstrucgicip, nmvsp dppensaryé as in ton- nava a ra r , S10 quar ers a ava - ca emy an marine Iiarracks, dispensarieg at navy-yards and naval stations, and ships; and for minor repairs on buildings and grounds of the United States Naval Museum of Hygiene and Department of Instruction; for the care, maintenance, and treatment of the insane of the Navy and Marine Corps on the Pacific coast, and all other necessary contingent expenses; in all, fifty-five thousand dollars. mrggssegpzogggq _ hiugsmnpauoivo or izméizalngsé To pnabge ttéhefecrletary 051 the Navy, sm. 1D is Iscre Ion, cause rans erre e1r omes e remams of officers and enlisted men of the Navy and Marine Corpls who die or are killed in action ashore or ailoat, and also to enable the Secretary of the Navy, in his discretion, to cause to be transported to their _ homes the remains of civilian employees who die outside of the conti- {Q';’,'g',f,;,,,,,,,,;;,,,,.;_ rrigntalllimits tif the United St£atps,ht§nbthousand)l dpllars: Provzdgd, att e sum erein appropria e s a e avaia e or paymen or transportation of the remains of officers and men who have died while on duty at any time since April- twenty-first, eighteen hundred and ninet I-eight. R°P°—**¤· Rninuigs, BUREAU or MEDICINE AND SURGERY: For necessary repairs of naval laboratory, naval hospitals, and appendages, including roads, wharves, outhouses, sidewalks, fences, gardens, farms, an cemeteries, forty-five thousand dollars.

  • m°**°**`*°*‘···“· c£.‘$§.I‘l.`£..‘I1,‘“l£3“33fn°f£¤i3Sili?I}h€°T i?§IL"?1$ "°£2i°0“§F~.3i¤§“$$3T.;

1 2 I I s I J v ' supplies, to be immedihtely available, nine bundled dollars. .¤%“§“c°Y,,‘f,,?“""°“ nunmv or surrnrns AND Accoumvs. P'°""°"·°°°‘ Pnovisrons, Navy: For provisions and commuted rations for the seamen and marines, which commuted rations ma be id to caterers of messes, in case of death or desertion, upon ordhrs ofxthe command— ing officers, commuted rations for officers on sea duty (other than commissioned officers of the line, Medical and Pay Corps, and chief boatswains, chief gunners, chief sailmakers, chief carpenters)., and midshipmen, and commuted rations stopped on account of sick in hos— pital and credited to the naval hospital fund; subsistence of officers and men unavoidably detained or absent from vessels to which attached under orders (during which subsistence rations to be stopped on board ship and no credit for commutation therefor to be given); labor in general storehouses and paymasters’ offices in navy—yards, including naval stations maintained in island possessions under the control of the United States, and expenses in handling stores purchased under the naval-supply fund; one chemist, at two thousand five hundred dollars per annum, and two chemists, at two thousand dollars each per annum, one hundred thousand United States Army emergenc mtions, five émmwm mp million five hundred and fortyétwo thousand dollars: Awuided, That x>1<>yee¤. pay department stores may sold to civilian emplovees at naval stations beyond the continental limits of the United States and in-