Annual Reports of the Secretary of War, Volume 2 |
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Page 21
... harbor improvements at Manila and construction of a wharf at which army transports can load and unload should also contribute largely toward reducing expenses , by eliminating lighter- age charges at Manila and affording more economical ...
... harbor improvements at Manila and construction of a wharf at which army transports can load and unload should also contribute largely toward reducing expenses , by eliminating lighter- age charges at Manila and affording more economical ...
Page 25
... HARBOR - BOAT SERVICE . The records show that there were in service in the United States during the fiscal year 78 owned vessels , distributed among the various harbors along the Atlantic and Pacific oceans and Gulf of Mexico , engaged ...
... HARBOR - BOAT SERVICE . The records show that there were in service in the United States during the fiscal year 78 owned vessels , distributed among the various harbors along the Atlantic and Pacific oceans and Gulf of Mexico , engaged ...
Page 26
... Harbor . Shortly before the close of the fiscal year 1906 , when it was ascer- tained funds would be available , and ... harbor boats , and launches will be found on pages 36 to 39 , inclusive , of my Annual Report for 1905. Vessels of ...
... Harbor . Shortly before the close of the fiscal year 1906 , when it was ascer- tained funds would be available , and ... harbor boats , and launches will be found on pages 36 to 39 , inclusive , of my Annual Report for 1905. Vessels of ...
Page 27
... Harbor . In service between San Francisco and Manila . Do. Out of commission , San Francisco Harbor . In service , San Francisco Harbor . REGULAR TRANS - PACIFIC SERVICE . Vessels . - The Logan , Sheridan , Sherman , and Thomas ...
... Harbor . In service between San Francisco and Manila . Do. Out of commission , San Francisco Harbor . In service , San Francisco Harbor . REGULAR TRANS - PACIFIC SERVICE . Vessels . - The Logan , Sheridan , Sherman , and Thomas ...
Page 29
... Harbor destroyed by the earthquake . This duty completed , the vessel returned to Tacoma . The cost of this voyage was $ 12,343.96 . WORK OF THE TRANSPORTS . The following shows more in detail the service rendered by the transports ...
... Harbor destroyed by the earthquake . This duty completed , the vessel returned to Tacoma . The cost of this voyage was $ 12,343.96 . WORK OF THE TRANSPORTS . The following shows more in detail the service rendered by the transports ...
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Common terms and phrases
admission rate Alaska allotment ammunition amount appropriations approved Army transportation Balance on hand batteries beriberi cable Camp cavalry cent Chief of Artillery Coast Artillery Coast Defense Board command Congress construction contributed by Dr cost D. C. Specimen death rate depot Disbursed discharge duty dysentery efficiency enlisted equipment expenses feet Field Artillery fire fire-control fire-control system fiscal year 1906 funds hand July harbor Hospital Corps increase infantry installation issued Jolo June 30 lowest Luzon Manila mean strength Medical ment militia necessary noneffective rates operation organization paymasters Philippine Islands post marked U. S. M. R. purchase Quartermaster's Department quartermasters Ratio recommended recruits repairs San Francisco searchlights Secretary Secretary of War sergeants Signal Corps soldiers stations Subsistence Department supplies surgeon telegraph thence thru tion torpedo Treasury troops tuberculosis typhoid fever U. S. Army United United States Army venereal diseases War Department Washington
Popular passages
Page 235 - Board to make all needful and proper purchases, experiments, and tests to ascertain, with a view to their utilization by the Government, the most effective guns, small arms, cartridges, projectiles, fuzes, explosives, torpedoes, armor plates, and other implements and engines of war, and to purchase or cause to be manufactured, under authority of the Secretary of War, such guns, carriages, armor plates, and other war...
Page 128 - APPARENTLY CURED. All constitutional symptoms and expectoration with bacilli absent for a period of three months ; the physical signs to be those of a healed lesion. CURED. All constitutional symptoms and expectoration witli bacilli absent for a period of two years under ordinary conditions of life.
Page 128 - Slight or no constitutional symptoms (including particularly gastric or intestinal disturbances, or rapid loss of weight) ; slight or no elevation of temperature or acceleration of pulse at any time during the twenty-four hours. Expectoration usually small in amount or absent. Tubercle bacilli may be present or absent.
Page 236 - Fortification, five thousand dollars, the expenditure of which shall be made by the several bureaus of the War Department heretofore having jurisdiction of the same, or by the Board itself, as the Secretary of War may direct...
Page 178 - ... page 353 of Official Records, in said county recorder's office ; thence due south to a point in the Pacific Ocean three nautical miles from said ordinary high water mark; thence in a general westerly direction, parallel with the ordinary high water mark of the Pacific Ocean to a point due south from the point of beginning...
Page 118 - I have the honor to transmit herewith draft of a bill to increase the efficiency of the Medical Department of the Army.
Page 128 - Slight Initial lesion in the form of infiltration limited to the apex or a small part of one lobe. No tuberculous complications. Slight or no constitutional symptoms (particularly including gastric or Intestinal...
Page 52 - To enable the Secretary of War, in his discretion, to cause to be transported to their homes the remains of officers and soldiers who die at military camps or who are killed in action, or who die in the field or hospital in Alaska, and at places outside of the limits of the United States, or who die while on voyage at sea, twentytwo thousand dollars.
Page 9 - SIR: I have the honor to submit the annual report of the operations of the Quartermaster's Department for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1900: FINANCIAL STATEMENT.
Page 235 - To enable the Board to make all needful and proper purchases, experiments, and tests to ascertain, with a view to their utilization by the Government, the most effective guns, small arms, cartridges, projectiles, fuses, explosives, torpedoes, armor plates, and other implements and engines of war...