SIXTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. C1-1. 5. 1924. 711 WAR DEPARTMENT WM ¤¤¤¤r¢¤¤¤¤¤· Adjutant General’s Department: For the Army War College, D;‘—dJ;*;*¤¤*; G°¤¢*¤l’S $14,030; for the Command and General Staff School, Fort Leaven— pa mn` worth, Kansas, $1,680; and for military post exchanges, $5,040; in all, $20,750. Finance Department: For the pay of the Army, $16,680; and for F*¤°¤°°D°P¤"¤¤°¤*· the finance service, $282,049; in all, $298,729. Quartermaster Corps: For regular supplies of the Army, $179,078; Q“°'*°’m°S°°’C°*P°· for clothing and equipage, $381,332; for incidental expenses of the Army, $983,623.80; for Army transportation, $659,145; for barracks and quarters, $252,301.10; for water and sewers at military posts, $172,150; for roads, walks, wharves, and drainage, $47,439.60; and for the sewerage system, Fort Monroe, Virginia, $2,500; in all, $2,67 7,569.50. Signal Corps: For signal service of the Army, $101,119; for S‘g““‘S°"*°°~ maintenance of fire-control installations. In the United States, $6,016; in the insular possessions, $1,840; and on the Panama Canal, $860; in all, $109,835. _ Air Service, Army: For salaries and expenses, $678,043.80. *‘·“ S°"*°°· Medical Department: For the medical and hospital department, M°‘“°°‘D°p*‘”m°°'· $:1101,023; and for medical and hospital services, $203,156; in all, 04,179. Corps of Engineers: For engineer de ots, $14,555; for engineer E°g‘“°°F C°""s· schools, $2,650; for engineer equipment of) troops, $3,055; for civilian assistants to e ineer officers, $7,420; for engineer operations in the _ field, $16,475;Ii%>r military surveys and maps, $1,855; for fortifica- F°'m°°°°“" tions in the United States——plans for fortifications $1,500; for gun and mortar batteries, $40; for modernizing older emplacements, $135; for searchlights and electrical installations at seacoast fortifications $3,220; for sea walls and embankments, $1,690; for preservation and repair of fortifications, $25,655; for supplies for seacoast defenses, $6,155; for contingent expenses, seacoast fortifications, $2 920; and for maintenance of historical fortifications, $1,925; in all, United States fortifications, $43,240; for fortifications in insular possessions-—for plans for fortifications, $900; for searchlights and electrical installations, Hawaiian Islands, $3,740; for preservation and repair of fortifications, $16,040; and for supplies for Seacoast defenses, $4,205; in all, fortifications, insular possessions, $24,885; for fortifications for Panama Canal—for plans for fortifications, $350; and for preservation and repair of fortifications, $770; in all, fortigications, Panama Canal, $1,120. Total, Corps of Engineers, 115,255. _ _ Chemical Warfare Service Army, $207,980. _ _ S§§,‘L'}‘°°' W°"“‘° Chief of Infantry: For Infantry School, Fort Benning, Georgia, ¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¢¤¤¤¤¤· $3,120; and for the Tank Service, $3,840; in all, $6,960. $ Chief of Cavalry: For Cavalry School, Fort Riley, Kansas, 1,980. Chief of Field Artillery: For Field Artillery School, Fort Sill, Oklahoma, $1,320. cme, { Cm mi, Chief of Coast Artillery: For Coast Artillery School, Fort Mon- ,,,,._ ° ‘ POB, Vir inia., $1,240; and for submarine mines, $1,900; m all, $3,140. Mm Amd Uniteg States Military Academy: For pay of Military Academy, ‘ my °'°"‘ $39,001.24; and for maintenance, United States Military Academy, $157.330; in all, $196,33124. _ _ _ N mm, G rd GMilitia Bureau: For arming, equipping, and traming the National “ ““ ‘ uard, $600. . . Finance Department ; For citizens’ military training camps, $3,820. National Board for Promotion of Rifle Practice: For quarter- '°"'°'“ r&a;t6e)r supplies and services for rifle ranges for civilian instruction, } •