Annual Reports of the Secretary of War, Volume 1, Part 1 |
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Page 11
... received from General Otis since the date of his annual report of August 31 , 1899 , which briefly describe these various operations , together with other operations of interest , both on the island of Luzon , and in the Visayan and ...
... received from General Otis since the date of his annual report of August 31 , 1899 , which briefly describe these various operations , together with other operations of interest , both on the island of Luzon , and in the Visayan and ...
Page 19
... received , whenever the proper time comes . TRANSPORT SERVICE . The transportation of such large bodies of troops between Manila and the United States has made necessary the creation of a large fleet of ocean transports , and the great ...
... received , whenever the proper time comes . TRANSPORT SERVICE . The transportation of such large bodies of troops between Manila and the United States has made necessary the creation of a large fleet of ocean transports , and the great ...
Page 31
... received from Spain while a Span- ish colony , and that the markets of the United States should be opened to her as were the markets of Spain and Cuba before the transfer of allegiance . Congress has the legal right to regulate the ...
... received from Spain while a Span- ish colony , and that the markets of the United States should be opened to her as were the markets of Spain and Cuba before the transfer of allegiance . Congress has the legal right to regulate the ...
Page 36
... received , but of a cable between California and the Philip- pines via Hawaii , Wake Island , and Guam . The length of such a cable would be 7,493 miles , as against 7,986 miles for the proposed British cable , and the cost is estimated ...
... received , but of a cable between California and the Philip- pines via Hawaii , Wake Island , and Guam . The length of such a cable would be 7,493 miles , as against 7,986 miles for the proposed British cable , and the cost is estimated ...
Page 39
... received as money on deposit $ 189,258.81 , making the total amount of money received $ 1,810,657.48 . There was expended for merchandise purchased , rent , fixtures , and repairs , and expenses of operation $ 1,297,737.16 , which ...
... received as money on deposit $ 189,258.81 , making the total amount of money received $ 1,810,657.48 . There was expended for merchandise purchased , rent , fixtures , and repairs , and expenses of operation $ 1,297,737.16 , which ...
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Common terms and phrases
absence without leave absolute prohibition amount Army artillery average barracks Board Branch bread building butter cadets camp canteen feature Capt Cavalry cent civilians coffee commanding Battery commanding Company commanding Troop Commissary Sergeant conducted at present cost courts-martial Cuba Danville Department desertions discipline drink duty effect ending June 30 engineer enlisted establishment exchange as conducted exchange system expenses favor feet Fort Monroe Government hall Home Hospital Steward improvement increase drunkenness Infantry inmates instruction insurgents intoxicants island July June 12 June 30 Lieut liquor Marion ment mess Military Academy month morality Ninth Cavalry Northwestern officers oleomargarine opinion Ordnance Sergeant outdoor relief Pacific pension post exchange Post Quartermaster-Sergeant pounds procure profits purchase quartermaster quarters regulations reported result River sale of beer saloons Secretary Secretary of War September 30 sold soldiers supplies tion Total treasurer United States Military War Department West Point whisky
Popular passages
Page 312 - 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, and to purchase or cause to be manufactured, under authority of the .Secretary of War, such guns, carriages, armor plates, and other war material as may, in the judgment of the Board, be necessary in the proper discharge...
Page 593 - Academy, except in cases where, by reason of death or other cause, a vacancy occurs which cannot be provided for by such appointment in advance ; but no pay or other allowance shall be given to any appointee until he shall have been regularly admitted, as herein provided; and all appointments shall be conditional until such provisions...
Page 35 - The civil rights and political status of the native inhabitants of the territories hereby ceded to the United States shall be determined by the Congress.
Page 635 - I, AB, do solemnly swear that I will support the Constitution of the United States, and bear true allegiance to the National Government; that- I will maintain and defend the sovereignty of the United States, paramount to any and all allegiance, sovereignty or fealty I may owe to any State, county or country whatsoever; and that I will at all times obey the legal orders of my superior officers, and the rules and articles governing the armies of the United States.
Page 90 - ... reading and recreation rooms, supplied with books, periodicals, and other reading matter, billiard and pool tables, bowling alley, and facilities for other proper in-door games, as well as apparatus for out-door sports and exercises, such as cricket, football, baseball, tennis, etc.; a well-equipped gymnasium, possessing also the requisite paraphernalia for out-door athletics.
Page 312 - February twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and ninety-one, and for the necessary traveling expenses of said member when traveling on duty as contemplated in said act; for the payment of the necessary expenses of the board, including a per diem allowance to each officer detailed to serve thereon, when employed on duty away from his permanent station, of two dollars and fifty cents a day; and for the test of experimental guns...
Page 38 - ... or otherwise, in any post exchange or canteen, nor shall any other person be required or allowed to sell such liquors in any encampment or fort or on any premises used for military purposes by the United States; and the Secretary of War is hereby directed to issue such general order as may be necessary to carry the provisions of this section into full force and effect.
Page 312 - 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...
Page 92 - There is, too, a general acquiescence in the doctrine that debates in Congress are not appropriate sources of information from which to discover the meaning of the language of a statute passed by that body.
Page 92 - ... that passed it by resorting to the speeches of individual members thereof. Those who did not speak may not have agreed with those who did. and those who spoke might differ from each other, the result being that the only proper way to construe a legislative act Is from the language used in the act, and, upon occasion, by a resort to the history of the times when it was passed.