Annual Report of the Secretary of the NavyU.S. Government Printing Office, 1910 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 6
... vessels which has brought about markedly greater efficiency . It has also produced a more even amount of repair work at navy - yards . This is of im- portance as a greater economy ensues and it keeps a more uniform number of good ...
... vessels which has brought about markedly greater efficiency . It has also produced a more even amount of repair work at navy - yards . This is of im- portance as a greater economy ensues and it keeps a more uniform number of good ...
Page 9
... vessels are now performed by the ships ' crews , as far as practicable . Officers are encouraged to improve the self ... vessels of little or no military value when the repairs were completed . During the past year these repairs have ...
... vessels are now performed by the ships ' crews , as far as practicable . Officers are encouraged to improve the self ... vessels of little or no military value when the repairs were completed . During the past year these repairs have ...
Page 11
... vessels of the navy has decreased over $ 2,000,000 . The coal consumption during the second half of the fiscal year was materially less than that for the first half , though more cruising was done in the second half . The improvement in ...
... vessels of the navy has decreased over $ 2,000,000 . The coal consumption during the second half of the fiscal year was materially less than that for the first half , though more cruising was done in the second half . The improvement in ...
Page 20
... vessels of this fleet having been in service a considerable number of years were in need of general overhauling . ASIATIC FLEET . For strategic and administrative reasons the department has reestablished the Asiatic Fleet , and the ...
... vessels of this fleet having been in service a considerable number of years were in need of general overhauling . ASIATIC FLEET . For strategic and administrative reasons the department has reestablished the Asiatic Fleet , and the ...
Page 21
... vessels on the Liberian coast as deemed necessary to protect American interests and carry out the obligations imposed upon us by our treaty with that country . MOVEMENTS OF INDIVIDUAL VESSELS . The movements of all the vessels of the ...
... vessels on the Liberian coast as deemed necessary to protect American interests and carry out the obligations imposed upon us by our treaty with that country . MOVEMENTS OF INDIVIDUAL VESSELS . The movements of all the vessels of the ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
act March act May 13 appropriation Asiatic Torpedo Fleet Atlantic Fleet Auxiliary machinery Bath Iron battle ships Boilers Boston Brick building Bureau Cavite Charleston China coal collier commanding completed Concrete construction contract cost cruiser Cuba diseases docks duty Electric plant Engines enlisted Equipment expenditures funnels gunboat Hampton Roads Hull and fittings improvements installed Interior communications Iron July July 19 July 26 June 29 June 30 Lieut Mare Island Marine Corps Mass masts medical officers ment Miscellaneous Naval hospital Naval Militia Naval station navy Navy-yard Newport Nicaragua Norfolk Olongapo Pacific Permanent ordnance fittings Philadelphia Portsmouth Public bills Puget Sound quarters repair screw vertical triple Sept Slate Southern drill grounds Standing rigging Steel Storehouse supply target practice tion Tons torpedo boat Torpedo Fleet Twin screw vertical Unknown vertical triple expansion Wood yard York
Popular passages
Page 317 - And whenever any officer, seaman, or marine entitled to a pension is admitted to the Naval Home at Philadelphia or to a naval hospital his pension, while he remains there, shall be deducted from his accounts and paid to the Secretary of the Navy for the benefit of the fund from which such home or hospital, respectively, is maintained, and section forty-eight hundred and thirteen of the Revised Statutes of the United States is hereby amended accordingly.
Page 357 - ... 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 357 - For preservation and completion of vessels on the stocks and in ordinary; purchase of materials and stores of all kinds...
Page 357 - Estimated amount which will be required for each detailed object of expenditure. Total amount to be appropriated under each head of appropriation.
Page 289 - ... in line of duty, he shall be retired, with the rank to which his seniority entitles him to be promoted...
Page 367 - The annual report of the Chief of the Bureau of Construction and Repair...
Page 15 - The amount so advanced during the fiscal years nineteen hundred and eleven and nineteen hundred and twelve shall be charged to the proper appropriations as these...
Page 358 - ... 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 151 - SIR : I have the honor to submit the following report of the operations of this office for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1854, and for the third quarter of the current calendar year.
Page 14 - March third, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, making in all, five hundred thousand dollars, which amount shall be carried to the credit of the permanent naval supply fund, to be used under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy in the purchase of ordinary commercial supplies for the naval service, and to be reimbursed from the proper naval appropriations, whenever the supplies purchased under said funds are issued for use.