Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 13.djvu/110

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82 THIRTY-EIGHTH CGNGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 93: 1864. B¤§¤'9¤¤ of Bureau of Provisions and Olothing. -— For contingent expenses, vis; §,°;,°,X:§;g”° and For candles, freight to foreign stations, transportation from station to i station within the United States, cooperage, pay of assistants to inspectors, advertising for proposals, printing paymasters’ blanks, and stationery for _ _ cruising vessels; five hundred thousand dollars. °f “‘“‘°“‘° Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. — For contingent expenses of the and surgery, , , . bureau of medicine and surgery, sixty thousand dollars. t gigjgjgggm °”` Bureau of Steam Engineering. — For contingent expenses, yizz ` For transportation of materials, printing, stationery, advertising; books, drawings, models, postages, and incidental expenses, twenty-five thousand dollars. M“"l”° °°"PS· Marine Corps. - For pay of officers, non-commissioned officers, musicians, privates, clerks, messengers, steward and nurse and servants; for rations and clothing for officers' servants; additional rations to officers for five years’ service ; for undrawn clothing, and additional pay to musicians of the band, seven hundred and ninety-one thousand seven hundred and eighty-tive dollars and eighty cents. For provisions, one hundred and thirty-five thousand nine hundred and twenty-six dollars. For clothing, two hundred and twenty-three thousand three hundred and ninety-eight dollars. For fuel, thirty-one thousand four hundred and thirty dollars and seventy-five cents. For military stores, viz: Pay of mechanics, repairs of arms, purchase of accoutrements, ordnance stores, {lags, drums, fifes, and other instruments, fifteen thousand dollars. For transportation of officers, their servants, troops, and expenses of recruiting, twenty-two thousand dollars. For repairs of barracks, and rent of offices where there are no public buildings, eight thousand dollars. For contingencies, viz: freight; ferriage; toll; cartage; whariiage; purchase and repair of boats; compensation to judge-advocates; per diem for attending courts-martial, courts of inquiry, and for constant labor; house rent in lieu of quarters; burial of deceased marines ; printing, stationery, postage, telegraphing; apprehension of deserters; oil, candles, gas; repairs of gas and water fixtures; water rent, forage, straw, barraok furniture; furniture for officers’ quarters in the barracks; bed sacks, wrapping-paper, oil-cloth, crash, rope, twine, spades, shovels, axes, picks, earpenters’ tools; keep of a horse for the messenger; pay ofmatron, wasbe1‘· woman, and porter at the hospital head-quarters; repairs to fire-engine; purchase and repair of engine hose ; purchase of lumber for benches, mess-tables, and hunks ; repairs to public carryall; purchase and repair of harness; purchase and repair of handcarts and wheelbarrows; scavenger~ ing; purchase and repair of galleys, cooking-stoves, ranges; stoves where there are no grates; gravel for parade grounds; repair of pumps; furniture for staff and commanding officers’ offices; brushes, brooms, buckets, paving, and for other purposes, forty-izive thousand dollars. For widening and improving the marine barracks, and officers’ quarters at uthe navy yard, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, twenty-two thousand o ars. For building marine barracks, at navy yard, Mare Island, California, thirty-nine thousand fifty-eight dollars and forty-four cents. Navy yards. NAVY YARDS. P°¤‘*¤¤9¤*h· Portsmouth, Mw Hampshire. — For plumbers, coppersmiths, and tinshops, quay-walls, mooring-piers, iron store, extension of ship-house, machinery and tools, repairs on floating dock, barracks and guard-house, on Seavey’s Island, and for repairs of all kinds, one hundred and fifty-one thousand nine hundred and thirty-five dollars.