598 FIFTY-SECON D CONGRESS. Sess. II. On. 208. 1893. tor in this act; and said lamps shall burn not less than three thousand hours per annum; and authority is hereby given to substitute other illuminating material for the same or less price, and to use so much of · the sum hereby appropriated as may be necessary for that purpose: mmm. Provided, That before any expenditures are made from the appropriations herein provided for, the contracting gas company shall equip each lamp with a self-regulating burner and tip, so combined and adjusted as to secure under all ordinary variations of pressure and density a consumption of six cubic feet of gas per hour. 11¤¤¤·1¤1ieh¤¤- For electric lights for three hundred and sixty-Eve nights from seven posts, at forty cents per light per night, one thousand and twenty-two ollars. _R¤v°g;r of ver REPAIR or warms 1>Ir1·:s: For repairing and extending water ` F'"' pipes, purchase of apparatus for cleaning them, purchase of hose, and cleaning the springs and repairing and renewing the pipes of the same that supply the Capitol, the Executive Mansion, and the building for the State, War, and Navy Departments, two thousand five hundred dollars. 'rclesrnrb. mmm TELEGBAPI1 T0 00mm0T THE CAPITOL WITH THE DEPARTMENTS £,$,‘L{',f,:,§',,§"{»K‘§;,,;,g AND GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: For care and repair of existing '°¤*°°· lines, one thousand two hundred and fifty dollars. wgnnngm mm- WASHINGTON MoNUMnNT: For the care and maintenance of the "CZ., gnd mma, Washirigton Monument, namely: For one custodian, at one hundred ¤¤°°· dollars per month; one steam engineer, at eighty dollars per month; one assistant steam engineer, at sixty dollars per month; one fireman, at fifty dollars per month; one assistant iireman, at forty-five dollars per month; one conductor of elevator car at seventy-five dollars per month; one attendant on floor, at sixty dollars per month; one attendant on top floor, at sixty dollars per month; three night and day watchmen, at sixty dollars per month each; in all, eight thousand five hundred and twenty dollars. l¤’°*°°°· For fuel, lights, oil, waste, packing, tools, matches, paints, brushes, brooms, lanterns, rope, nails, screws, lead, electric lights, heating apparatus, oil stoves for elevator car and upper and lower iloor, repairs to engines, boilers, dynamos elevator, and repairs of all kinds connected with the monument and machinery, and purchase of all necessary articles for keeping the monument, machinery, elevator, and electrielight plant in good order, three thousand dollars.
MILITARY P0sTS: For the construction of buildings at and the enlaiggment of such military posts as, in the judgment of the Secretary
of ar, may be necessary, three hundred and fifty thousand dollars. ggykut Provided further, That the sum of one hundred thousand dollars. Am, p. sa.appropriated by act approved May twelfth,eighteeu hundred and ninety two, for the establishment of a military post at Helena, Montana, may be used for beginning the construction of the necessary barracks, quarters, hospitals, kitchens, mess halls, stables, storehouses, magazines, defenses, and other necessary improvements and buildings provided ri¤¤i¢¤f¤¤¤f- for in said act: Provided, That the cost of such improvements and buildings shall not exceed the sum of two hundred thousand dollars. |,Y¤¤,l<;,·;·_3g·¤¤ N·· Imnovnmnur or THE Ynimowsronn Nariomu. PARK: For the ` improvement of the Yellowstone National Park, thirty thousand dolmrs, to be expended by and under the direction of the Secretary of ar.
¤¤¤¤=g¤;¤§,g_¤:n·;,¤ Onrcxmnuoa Ann Cnyrrxnooen NATIONAL PARK: To enable
rmt. the Secretary of War to complete the establishment of the Chickamanga and Chattanooga National Military Park, according to the terms of existing laws, including the construction of roads, surveys, maps, iron gun carriages, administration building, the purchase of land within the legal area of the park and the north point of Lookout Mountain, and for widening roads, for bronze historical tablets, repairs to bridges, one observation tower on Orchard Knob, compensation of the