Navy Department Appropriation Bill for 1939: Hearings Before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, Seventy-fifth Congress, Third Session, on the Navy Department Appropriation Bill for 1939U.S. Government Printing Office, 1938 - 849 pages |
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Page 4
... practice demands . To maintain the average age constant at 19 years would require an annual expenditure of $ 1,550,000 , which would have included re- placements and additions . The actual annual expenditures from 1930 through 1937 have ...
... practice demands . To maintain the average age constant at 19 years would require an annual expenditure of $ 1,550,000 , which would have included re- placements and additions . The actual annual expenditures from 1930 through 1937 have ...
Page 14
... practice and fuel for the fleet are two examples . No allowance in the estimates has been made for any increase in 1939 over present prices . Mr. UMSTEAD . Admiral , what is the cause of the tremendous in- crease in the price of ...
... practice and fuel for the fleet are two examples . No allowance in the estimates has been made for any increase in 1939 over present prices . Mr. UMSTEAD . Admiral , what is the cause of the tremendous in- crease in the price of ...
Page 32
... practice calls for a 10 - percent annual replace- ment of machine tools , which results in equipment having an average age of 5 years . The average age of machine tools in the continental navy yards is , at the present time ...
... practice calls for a 10 - percent annual replace- ment of machine tools , which results in equipment having an average age of 5 years . The average age of machine tools in the continental navy yards is , at the present time ...
Page 33
... practice of making an annual purchase of motor trucks cover- ing requirements at all stations in lieu of individual purchases was continued in the fiscal year 1937 with a resulting saving of about 10 percent . POWER COSTS Due to the ...
... practice of making an annual purchase of motor trucks cover- ing requirements at all stations in lieu of individual purchases was continued in the fiscal year 1937 with a resulting saving of about 10 percent . POWER COSTS Due to the ...
Page 38
... practice of transferring serviceable material no longer required at one place to other activities at which needed is carried out whenever possible . During the fiscal year 1938 , food conveyors , dining room and ward equipment ...
... practice of transferring serviceable material no longer required at one place to other activities at which needed is carried out whenever possible . During the fiscal year 1938 , food conveyors , dining room and ward equipment ...
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Common terms and phrases
1938 appropriation active additional Admiral ANDREWS Admiral BowEN Admiral CONARD Admiral Cook Admiral Du BOSE Admiral FURLONG Admiral LEAHY Admiral MOREELL Admiral ROSSITER Admiral SELLERS aircraft airplanes allocation allowance ammunition amount armament Armor average aviation cadets base battleships boats Budget building Bureau of Aeronautics Bureau of Engineering Bureau of Navigation Captain WILKINSON Captain YATES chinery Coco Solo Commander commission committee cost cruisers decommissioned destroyers DITTER duty employees Engineering enlisted equipment esti estimate for 1939 expenditures expenses fiscal year 1939 fleet funds guns GYGAX HOLCOMB improvement included increase Lieutenant maintenance material ment midshipmen Naval Academy Naval Reserve Navy Department Navy Yard necessary Newport nonrecurring items officers outfits overhaul Pearl Harbor percent personnel Philadelphia Navy Yard planes plant PLUMLEY present purchase reduced requested for 1939 SCRUGHAM seaplane tender shipbuilding ships statement submarines subsistence tion torpedo Total transportation treaty UMSTEAD units
Popular passages
Page 324 - ... unmanufactured articles, materials, and supplies as have been mined or produced in the United States, and only such manufactured articles, materials, and supplies as have been manufactured in the United States substantially all from articles, materials, or supplies mined, produced, or manufactured, as the case may be, in the United States, shall be acquired for public use.
Page 122 - There is a great deal of work that has to be done on these forests in the way of stand improvement, fire prevention, and improvements of one kind and another.
Page 65 - A vessel shall be deemed to be "over-age" when the following number of years have elapsed since the date of its completion : (a) For a surface vessel exceeding 3,000 tons (3,048 metric tons) but not exceeding 10,000 tons...
Page 65 - Except as provided in Article 20, the tonnage laid down in any category subject to limitation in accordance with Article 16 shall not exceed the amount necessary to reach the maximum allowed tonnage of the category, or to replace vessels that become "overage" before the 31st December, 1936. Nevertheless, replacement tonnage may be laid down for cruisers and submarines that become "overage" in 1937, 1938 and 1939, and for destroyers that become "overage
Page 298 - Navy, such employment would be advantageous to the public interests, and messes temporarily set up on shore for officers attached to seagoing vessels, to aviation units based on seagoing vessels including officers...
Page 324 - Notwithstanding any other provision of law, and unless the head of the department or independent establishment concerned shall determine it to be inconsistent with the public interest, or the cost to be unreasonable, only such unmanufactured articles, materials, and supplies as have been mined or produced in the United States, and only such manufactured articles, materials, and supplies as have been manufactured in the United States substantially all from articles, materials, or supplies mined...
Page 561 - AND DOCKS. The duties of the Bureau of Yards and Docks comprise all that relates to the design and construction of public works, such as dry docks, marine railways, building ways, harbor works, quay walls, piers, wharves, slips, dredging, landings, floating and stationary cranes, power plants, coaling plants; heating, lighting, telephone, water, sewer, and railroad systems; roads, walks, and grounds; bridges, radio towers, and all buildings, for whatever purpose needed, under the Navy and Marine...
Page 62 - In particular, except in the case of persistent refusal to stop on being duly summoned, or of active resistance to visit or search, a warship, whether surface vessel or submarine, may not sink or render incapable of navigation a merchant vessel without having first placed passengers, crew and ship's papers in a place of safety.
Page 281 - Navy in time of war or during the existence of a national emergency declared by the President...
Page 64 - In time of war, Turkey not being belligerent, warships shall enjoy complete freedom of transit and navigation through the Straits under the same conditions as those laid down in Articles 10 to 18. Vessels of war belonging to belligerent Powers shall not, however, pass through the Straits except in cases arising out of the application of Article 25 of the present Convention, and in cases of assistance rendered to a State victim...