Hearings Before the Committee on Naval Affairs of the House of Representatives on Estimates Submitted by the Secretary of the Navy, 1909U.S. Government Printing Office, 1909 - 949 pages |
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Page 2
He may or may not nominate the clerk who is doing the duty now . He would probably nominate some one else who is perfectly familiar with the pay rolls of the enlisted force . Mr. Hobson . I understand , then , that the clerk who is now ...
He may or may not nominate the clerk who is doing the duty now . He would probably nominate some one else who is perfectly familiar with the pay rolls of the enlisted force . Mr. Hobson . I understand , then , that the clerk who is now ...
Page 25
Of course , if the officer in charge of this roll , who is a paymaster in the navy , were on duty at a navy - yard he would be entitled to a clerk under the law . He is performing the same duty exactly , but with an office in the Bureau ...
Of course , if the officer in charge of this roll , who is a paymaster in the navy , were on duty at a navy - yard he would be entitled to a clerk under the law . He is performing the same duty exactly , but with an office in the Bureau ...
Page 339
Then on page 168 there is this proviso : “ Provided , That hereafter extra - duty pay will not be allowed to enlisted men of the Marine Corps except when they are regularly detailed thereon by a written order of the commandant of the ...
Then on page 168 there is this proviso : “ Provided , That hereafter extra - duty pay will not be allowed to enlisted men of the Marine Corps except when they are regularly detailed thereon by a written order of the commandant of the ...
Page 415
on board ships in times of peace and in times of war , and at all times performing their duty to the entire satisfaction of the authorities under whom they served . There must have been cogent reasons and not purely sentimental ones for ...
on board ships in times of peace and in times of war , and at all times performing their duty to the entire satisfaction of the authorities under whom they served . There must have been cogent reasons and not purely sentimental ones for ...
Page 418
In the days of sailing ships during times of peace marines were used almost exclusively for the military duties of ... in addition to his military duty , which he and he alone does , is assigned to do exactly the same duty on deck as ...
In the days of sailing ships during times of peace marines were used almost exclusively for the military duties of ... in addition to his military duty , which he and he alone does , is assigned to do exactly the same duty on deck as ...
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ACTING CHAIRMAN additional Admiral HOLLYDAY Admiral Mason Admiral PILLSBURY allowance amount appropriation armor army authorized average battle ships better bill blue jackets board ship building Bureau BUTLER Captain carry cent Chief clerks Colonel Colonel DENNY Commander committee complete Congress construction contract cost duty effect efficiency ELLIOTT engineering enlisted estimate expense fact feet fire fleet force four give guns Hobson hundred importance increase land Marine Corps material matter mean military naval navy Navy Department navy-yards necessary officers opinion PADGETT paid performed practice present question Rear-Admiral PILLSBURY reason received record regard repair ROBERTS sailors Secretary NEWBERRY shore showing Special statement station submitted supply thing thousand dollars tion training station transports understand United vessels yard
Popular passages
Page 395 - Marine Corps shall be liable to do duty in the forts and garrisons of the United States, on the seacoast, or any other duty on shore, as the President, at his discretion, may direct.
Page 709 - Navy, and by him referred to and approved in his letter to the chairman of the Committee on Naval Affairs...
Page 241 - That, for the purpose of further increasing the Naval Establishment of the United States, the President is hereby authorized to have constructed...
Page 225 - That no part of this sum shall be applied to the repairs of any wooden ship when the estimated cost of such repairs, to be appraised by a competent board of naval officers, shall exceed twenty per centum of the estimated cost, appraised in like manner, of a new ship of the same size and like material...
Page 225 - That the Secretary of the Navy shall hereafter report to Congress, at the commencement of each regular session, the number of vessels and their names upon which any repairs or changes are proposed which in any case shall amount to more than two hundred thousand dollars...
Page 337 - June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and eighty-nine, shall not exceed sixty thousand dollars; and that the Secretary of War shall each year, in the annual estimates, report to Congress the number of persons so employed, and the amount paid to each.
Page 793 - Corps, without having first received a discharge from the regiment, troop, or company in which he had previously served, shall be removed in all cases where it shall be made to appear to the satisfaction of the Secretary of War, from such rolls and records, or from other satisfactory testimony, that such re-enlistment was not made for the purpose of securing bounty or other gratuity that he would not have been entitled to had he remained under his original term of enlistment...
Page 74 - Provided, That the sum to be paid out of this appropriation under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy for chemists...
Page 584 - We are not going to work for 75 cents a day." The CHAIRMAN. They do not have the Wagner Act over there. Mr. HILL. Nor the Taft-Hartley Act, either. Now, we are right where we started. The CHAIRMAN. Does that conclude your statement, Mr. White? Mr. WHITE. That concludes my statement. Thank you. The CHAIRMAN. Are there any questions from members of the committee? Mr. GATHINGS. Mr.
Page 225 - ... per centum of the estimated cost, 'appraised in like manner, of a new ship of the same size and like material : Provided further, That nothing herein contained...