Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 31.djvu/1162

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11].0 FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 852. 1901. IS§,;’,gs}{_°,f‘S H“'b°’ NAVAL TRAINING STATION, RHoDE ISLAND: Maintenance of naval ’ apprentice trainin station, Coasters Harbor Island, Rhode Island, namely: Labor and material; buildings and wharves; dred ing channels; extending sea wall; repairs to causeway and sea wai; eneral care, repairs, and improvements of grounds, buildings,and wgarves; wharfage, ferriage, and street-car fare; purchase and maintenance of live stock, and attendance on same; wagons, carts, implements, and tools, and repairs to same; 1ire engines and extinguishers; boats and gymnastic implements; models and other articles needed in instruction of apprentices; printing outfit and materials, and maintenance of same; heating, lighting, and furniture; stationery, books, and periodicals; fresh water, ice, and washing; freight and expressage; packing boxes and materials; postage and telegraphincg; telephones; and all other contingent expenses, forty-five thousand ollars. Nava1War conege. NAVAL WAR COLLEGE, UOASTERS HARBOR ISLAND, RHODE ISLAND: For maintenance of the Naval War College on Coasters Harbor Island, and care of grounds for same, including one draftsman, at one thougarhd two hundred dollars per year; in all, nine thousand two hundred o ars. For, the services of a lecturer on international law, one thousand dollars; for the services of civilian lecturers from universities and colleges renderrd at the War College, six hundred dollars, and for the purclgase of books of reference, four hundred dollars; in all, two thousand ollars. ‘ d§ag;11H¤me.Phi1¤- NAVAL HoME, PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA: One superintendent e P m' of rounds, at six hundred dollars; one steward, at four hundred and eiglity dollars; one matron, at three hundred and sixty dollars; one chief cook, at three hundred and sixty dollars; one-assistant cook, at two hundred and forty dollars; one assistant cook, at one hundred and eighty dollars; one chief laundress, at one hundred and ninety -two dollars; five laundresses, at one hundred and sixty-eight dollars each; four scrubbers, at one hundred and sixty-eight dollars each; one head waitress, at one hundred and ninety-two dollars; eight waitresses, at one hundred and sixty-eight dollars each; one kitchen servant, at two hundred dollars; eight laborers, at two hundred and forty dollars each; one stable keeper and driver, at three hundred and sixty dollars; one master at arms, at four hundred and eighty dollars; two house corporals, at three hundred dollars each; one barber, at three hundred and sixty dollars; one carpenter, at eight hundred and forty-five dollars; one painter, at eight undred and forty-five dollars; one engineer for elevator and machinery, six hundred dollars; three laborers, at three hundred and sixty dollars each; three laborers, at three hundred dollars each; water rent and lighting, two thousand one hundred dollars; cemetery, burial expenses, and headstones, three hundred and fifty dollars; improvement of rounds, nine hundred dollars; repairs to buildings, boilers, furnaces, gurniture, eight thousand dollars; music in chapel, six hundred dollars; trans ortation of indigent and destitute benenciaries to the Naval Home, one giundred dollars; support of beneiiciaries, fift thousand seven hundred and twenty-five dollars; in all, for Naval Hbme, seventy-six thousand four hundred and twenty-five dollars,·which sum shall be paid out of the income from the naval pension fund. Bu.reauofOx·d¤ance. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. 0¤*1¤¤¤¢¤¤¤¤¤t<>r€¤- ORDNANCE AND ORDNANCE s*roREs: For procuring, producing, preserving, and handling ordnance material; for the armament of ships; for fuel, material, and labor to be used in the general work of the Ordnance De artment; for watchmen at magazines, powder factories, and powder dgpots; for furniture in ordnance buildings at navy-yards