FIFTY -EIGH'1‘H CONGRESS. Sess. H. Ch. 1622. 1904. 329 expenses of transportation and storage of the same; stationery for chaplains and for commanding and navigating officers of ships, equipment officers on shore and ailoat, and for the use of courtsmartial on board ship; the removal and transportation of ashes fr·om ships of war; interior appliances and tools for equipment buildin in navy-yards and naval stations; supplies for seamen’s quarters; andsfor the purchase of all other articles of equipment at home and abroad, and for the payment of labor in equippmgsvessels and manufacture of equipment articles in the several navy—yar ; all pilotage and towage of ships of war; canal tolls, wharfage, dock and port charges, and other necessary incidental expenses of a similar nature; services and materials in repairing, correcting, adjusting, and testing compasses on shore and on board ship; nautical and astronomical instruments and repairs to same; libraries for ships of war, professional books and papers, and drawings and engravings for signal books; naval signals and apparatus, namely, signals, ights, lanterns, rockets, and running lights; compass fittings, including binnacles, tripods, and other appendages of ships’ compasses; logs and other appliances for measuring the ship’s way, and leads and other appliances for sounding; lanterns and lamps, an their appendages for general use on board ship for illuminating purposes and oil and candles used in connection therewith; service and suppliesfor coast-signal service; buntinig and other materials for making and repairing ags of all kinds; p otographs, photographic instruments an materials; musical instruments and music; installing, maintainin , and repairin interior and exterior signal communications and all electrical qgphances of whatsoever nature on board naval vessels, except range fin ers battle order and range transmitters and indicators, and motors and their controlling apparatus used to operate the machinery·belongip_g to other bureaus, three million, dollars. Dmrorrs mn con.: o enable the Secretary of the Navy to execute Q'}'; v_,,,, the provisions of section fifteen hundred and fifty-two of the Revised ’ ' Statutes, authorizing the Secretary of the Navy to establish, at such laces as he may deem necessary, suitable depots for coal and other ihel, for the supply of steamships of war, including the purchase of necessary land, six hundred thousanddollars. Con. AND TRANSPORTATIONI Purchase of coal and other fuel for °°”·l· °'·°· steamers’ and ships’ use, and other e uipment purposes, including expenses of transportation, storage, and handling the same, two million seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars. CONTINGENT, BUnr=:AU or EQUIPMENT: For freight and transporta- °°““"‘°“‘· tion of equipment stores; packing boxes and materials, printing, advertising, telegaphing, books, and models, stationery; urniture for equipment offices in navy·yards; postage on letters sent abroad; ferriage, ice, and emergencies arisin under eognizance of the Bureau gf gpquipment unforeseen and impossihle to classi y, thirty-five thousand o ars. . OCEAN Arm LAKE sunvnrsz Hydrographic surveys, and for the pur- v_§g*¤ ¤¤¤1¤¤¤ ¤¤*· chase of nautical books, charts, and sailing directions, and freight and ` ex ress charges on the same, seventy-five thousand dollars. givin Esmsnrsnmnrrr, BUREAU or Eomrmmzrz Nav -yard, Ports- g2j,*r§}_;_§_g·;,Q,*{¤*,;,¤§f*F- mouth, New Hampshire: For one clerk, at one thousand, two hundred` dollars; one writer, nine hundred and fifty dollars; in all, two thousand one hundred and fifty dollars; Navy·yard, Boston, Massachusetts: For one superintendent of rope- B°°°°“· Mm walk, at two thousand dollars; one clerk, at one thousand four hundred dollars; one clerk, at one thousand three hundred dollars; one clerk at one thousand two hundred dollars; two writers, at nine hundred and fifty dollars each; one civil superintendent of chain shop, two thousand dollars· one civil superintendent of anchor shop, two thousand dollars; in all, eleven thousand eight hundred dollars;