Annual Report of the Secretary of the NavyU.S. Government Printing Office, 1913 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 8
... cost of work due to general adoption of the best details of each yard . RESULTS . The present organization of the Navy Department can be best judged by the satisfactory conditions existing to - day , for the business of the Navy is now ...
... cost of work due to general adoption of the best details of each yard . RESULTS . The present organization of the Navy Department can be best judged by the satisfactory conditions existing to - day , for the business of the Navy is now ...
Page 36
... costs of new and of reworked powder have been reduced about 10 per cent in each case , owing partly to the increased output and ... cost of work less than during any preceding year . The subject of 36 REPORT OF THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY .
... costs of new and of reworked powder have been reduced about 10 per cent in each case , owing partly to the increased output and ... cost of work less than during any preceding year . The subject of 36 REPORT OF THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY .
Page 40
... cost of main- tenance and repair of the old vessels , unserviceable for other pur- poses , is saved . PROGRESS IN ACCOUNTING WORK . In previous reports attention has been called to efforts to revise accounting and reporting methods and ...
... cost of main- tenance and repair of the old vessels , unserviceable for other pur- poses , is saved . PROGRESS IN ACCOUNTING WORK . In previous reports attention has been called to efforts to revise accounting and reporting methods and ...
Page 42
... cost has been effected . The manufacture of certain articles has been concentrated at those yards where it has been demonstrated that the work can be done most economically . Efforts have been made to diminish excess and inactive stock ...
... cost has been effected . The manufacture of certain articles has been concentrated at those yards where it has been demonstrated that the work can be done most economically . Efforts have been made to diminish excess and inactive stock ...
Page 48
... cost of this dry dock to make it available for ships of the Wyoming class and larger . The final contract was made during this administration ( September 1 , 1910 ) , providing for a dry dock with a length of 694 feet 6 inches from ...
... cost of this dry dock to make it available for ships of the Wyoming class and larger . The final contract was made during this administration ( September 1 , 1910 ) , providing for a dry dock with a length of 694 feet 6 inches from ...
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Common terms and phrases
appro armor Atlantic barracks battleships Boston building Bureau Cavite Charleston charts clerks construction and machinery Construction and repair contract disease and injury duty ending June 30 enlisted Equipment of vessels estimates expenditures fiscal year ending fleet Force afloat hospital ships Hospitals and hospital Hull and fittings Hydrographic Office improvements Increase Navy indirect injury for 1911 July June 29 June 30 Labor Mare Island Marine Corps material ment Miscellaneous Naval Academy Naval Hospital Naval supply account Navy Department navy yards Norfolk number of sick Olongapo Ordnance and ordnance ordnance stores personnel Philadelphia Portsmouth Public bills Puget Sound purchase recommended Sept sick days STATEMENT B-Continued statement of disease Stations and yards Steam machinery submarines tion torpedo boats Total number Transferred Tuberculosis United States Navy Vessels and appropriations vessels Nav vessels S. E. vessels Title Washington yards and stations York
Popular passages
Page 93 - No laborer or mechanic doing any part of the work contemplated by this contract, in the employ of the Contractor or any subcontractor contracting for any part of said work contemplated, shall be required or permitted to work more than eight hours in any one calendar day...
Page 24 - The United States ought not to indulge a persuasion that, contrary to the order of human events, they will forever keep at a distance those painful appeals to arms with which the history of every other nation abounds. There is a rank due to these United States among nations which will be withheld, if not absolutely lost, by the reputation of weakness.
Page 227 - 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 snip of the same size and like material...
Page 223 - Provided, That the sum to be paid out of this appropriation, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, for clerical, drafting, inspection, and messenger service in navy yards, naval stations, and offices of United States inspectors of machinery and engineering 'material for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1928, shall not exceed $1,575,000.
Page 93 - In such contract of five dollars for each laborer or mechanic for every calendar day In which he shall be required or permitted to labor more than eight hours upon said work...
Page 230 - That no part of any sum herein appropriated shall be expended for the purchase of structural steel, ship plates, armor, armament, or machinery...
Page 227 - ... designing naval vessels; construction and repair of yard craft, lighters, and barges; wear, tear, and repair of vessels afloat ; general care, increase, and protection of the Navy in the line of construction and repair ; incidental expenses for vessels and navy yards, inspectors...
Page 93 - An Act to provide for the opening, maintenance, protection, and operation of the Panama Canal and the sanitation and government of the Canal Zone.
Page 25 - If we desire to avoid insult, we must be able to repel it ; if we desire to secure peace, one of the most powerful instruments of our rising prosperity, it must be known that we are at all times ready for war.
Page 227 - For hemp, wire, iron, and other materials for the manufacture of cordage, anchors, cables, galleys, and chains, specifications for purchase thereof shall be so prepared as shall give fair and free competition; canvas for the manufacture of sails, awnings, hammocks, and other work...