Hearings Before Committee on Naval Affairs of the House of Representatives on Estimates Submitted by the Secretary of the Navy, 1913U.S. Government Printing Office, 1913 - 874 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 114
... feet long and 110 feet wide , with a central bay 30 feet in width having overhead electric crane with runway 40 feet above floor level . Mr. HOBSON . That is not a storeroom ? The CHAIRMAN . He said that only a part of 114.
... feet long and 110 feet wide , with a central bay 30 feet in width having overhead electric crane with runway 40 feet above floor level . Mr. HOBSON . That is not a storeroom ? The CHAIRMAN . He said that only a part of 114.
Page 115
... feet wide with overhead crane runways . Mr. HOBSON . You would not use that kind of a building for general storage ... feet wide and 200 feet long , or 9,000 square feet . Mr. HOBSON . Do you know what ships make the 115.
... feet wide with overhead crane runways . Mr. HOBSON . You would not use that kind of a building for general storage ... feet wide and 200 feet long , or 9,000 square feet . Mr. HOBSON . Do you know what ships make the 115.
Page 120
... feet . Mr. TRIBBLE . What is the character of the paving now ? Admiral STANFORD . Mostly granite - block paving . Mr. TRIBBLE . How long since it was put down ? Admiral STANFORD . The oldest was placed from 50 to 60 years ago and the ...
... feet . Mr. TRIBBLE . What is the character of the paving now ? Admiral STANFORD . Mostly granite - block paving . Mr. TRIBBLE . How long since it was put down ? Admiral STANFORD . The oldest was placed from 50 to 60 years ago and the ...
Page 121
... feet below mean low water . At the present time an attempt is made to preserve a minimum depth of 30 feet . On account of slight shoaling , due to sedimentation and silting up , the basin is too shallow for modern ships of approximately 30 ...
... feet below mean low water . At the present time an attempt is made to preserve a minimum depth of 30 feet . On account of slight shoaling , due to sedimentation and silting up , the basin is too shallow for modern ships of approximately 30 ...
Page 122
... feet below mean low water is estimated at 360,000 cubic yards , which would require an additional appropriation to be provided for 200,000 cubic yards . The present contract price is exceptionally low and was very much lower than any of ...
... feet below mean low water is estimated at 360,000 cubic yards , which would require an additional appropriation to be provided for 200,000 cubic yards . The present contract price is exceptionally low and was very much lower than any of ...
Common terms and phrases
additional Admiral ANDREWS Admiral CONE Admiral CowIE Admiral STANFORD Admiral TWINING Admiral WATT amount appropriation Armor and armament authorized barracks BATHRICK battleships bill building Bureau of Equipment Bureau of Navigation Bureau of Ordnance BUTLER canal Capt cent CHAIRMAN CHAMBERS chief civilian clerks coal coast command commission Congress Construction and Repair contract cost crane cruisers destroyers dredging duty engine enlisted equipment estimates expenditures expenses explain that item feet fiscal fleet Foss GIBBONS GOETHALS Government GREGG guns HOBSON increase instructors labor land machinery maintenance Mare Island Marine Corps material MCCAWLEY MCKENZIE ment Naval Academy naval stations Navy Department navy yards necessary officers Ordnance Pearl Harbor Philadelphia plant present purchase purpose quarters recommended ROBERTS Secretary MEYER ships statement steam STOKES submarines supply tion tons torpedo boats Total transportation United States Navy vessels WINTERHALTER Yards and Docks
Popular passages
Page 33 - Department, and the authorized number of officers' horses, and for stabling of public horses, nineteen thousand two hundred dollars. COMMUTATION OF QUARTERS, MARINE CORPS: For commutation of quarters for officers serving with troops where there are no public quarters belonging to the Government, and where there are not sufficient quarters possessed by the United States to...
Page 47 - That the accounting officers of the Treasury are hereby authorized and directed to allow, in the settlement of accounts of disbursing officers involved, payments made under the appropriation u Contingent, Navy...
Page 34 - For travel allowance of enlisted men discharged on account of expiration of enlistment; transportation of enlisted men and apprentice seamen at home and abroad, with subsistence and transfers en route, or cash in lieu thereof...
Page 47 - Provided, That no part of this sum shall be applied to the repair of any wooden ship when the estimated cost of such repairs, to be appraised by a competent board of naval officers, shall exceed ten per centum of the estimated cost, appraised in like manner, of a new ship of the same size and like material...
Page 37 - ... services and materials in repairing, correcting, adjusting, and testing compasses on shore and on board ship; nautical and astronomical instruments and repairs to same...
Page 50 - ... stationery, books, and periodicals; transportation of indigent and destitute beneficiaries to the Naval Home, and of sick and insane beneficiaries, their attendants and necessary subsistence for both, to and from other Government hospitals; employment of such beneficiaries in and about the Naval Home as may...
Page 47 - That no part of this sum shall be applied to the repair of any other 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: Provided further, That nothing herein contained shall deprive the Secretary of the Navy of the authority to order repairs of ships damaged in foreign waters or on the high seas, so far as may be necessary...
Page 11 - ... vegetables, three gills of beans or pease; in lieu of the weekly allowance of one-quarter pound of macaroni, four ounces of cheese, one-half pint of vinegar or sauce, one-quarter pint of pickles, one-quarter pint of molasses, and one-eighth ounce of spices, three pounds of sugar, or one and a...
Page 41 - PROVISIONS, NAVY: For provisions and commuted rations for the seamen and marines, which commuted rations may be paid to caterers of messes, in case of death or desertion, upon orders of the commanding officers...
Page 425 - An act to establish the flag of the United States, ' approved on the 4th of April, 1818, reading as follows: "SECTION 1. Be it enacted, etc., That from and after the fourth day of July next the flag of the United States be thirteen horizontal stripes, alternate red and white; that the union have twenty stars, white in a blue field.