Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 22.djvu/646

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FORTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ou. 143. 1883. 619 For prisoners’ beds, bed-sacks,hay, and blankets, two thousand eight Milimfy 1¤’i¤¤¤· hundred and forty-three dollars. F °3 L °“"°°' For stationery and blank books for offices of governor. adjutant,'quar— w° termaster; stamped envelopes and letter-paper for use of prisoners; and for books, periodicals, and newspapers for prison library, nine hundred and eighty-nine dollars and ninety cents. For hard wood for making steam, heating, and cooking, eleven thousand two hundred dollars. For steam·pipe couplings, and other material for extension of heatingcirculation, one thousand dollars. For belting, oil, cottou—waste, for running and repair of machinery, five hundred dollars. For tools and material in shops, laundry, stables; disinfectants; horse and mule shoes; hose for engine and tanks, five thousand two hundred dollars. — ‘ For stoves and stove-pipe inbuildings not heated by steam, two hundred dollars. _ For fifty thousand bricks, and for coping-stone to complete prisonwall, one thousand dollars. For washing-machines for the prison laundry, five hundred dollars. For medicines, medical and surgical appliances, and articles required in the care and treatment of the sick: hospital repairs, furniture, and stoves, one thousand five hundred and thirty dollars. For expenses for pursuing escaped prisoners arid rewards for their capture, three hundred dollars. For donations of five dollars each, and for clothing for prisoners on discharge, two thousand six hundred and twenty-one dollars and twenty- five cents. For advertising for proposals for supplies, one hundred dollars. For grain and hay for horses and mules used exclusively at the prison, three thousand five hundred and ninety-five dollars and sixteen cents. For pay of civilian employees: One clerk, at one hundred and fifty dohars per- mouth; one clerk, at one hundred and sixteen dollars and sixty-six cents per month ; one clerk, at one hundred dollars per montli; two night-watchmen, at thirty dollars per month each; ive teamsters, at thirt dollars per month each; six foreman of mechanics, at one hundred dollars per month each ; in all, fourteen thousand one hundred and nineteen dollars and ninety-two cents. For extra-duty pay to eight members of the prison-guard, seven hundred and thirteen dollars and seventy cents. For construction and repair of prison buildings and ot(icers’ and guards’ quarters, three thousand dollars. · For clothing for prisoners: Straw hats; material for winter coats; material for trousers; ilannel for blouses; flannel, at forty cents per yard; unbleached cotton for shirts; canton ilannel for drawers; woolen stockings and cotton stockings; material for boots and shoes; material for light summer clothing for prisoners in kitchen andshops; trimmings, thread, and buttons for coats, trousers, blouses, shirts, and drawers, fourteen thousand six hundred and seven dollars. National Home NATIONAL HOME FOB DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. for mabhd v01_ For the support of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Sol- mp,,;,,,, diers, as follows: For- current expenses, including construction and repairs, at the Central Branch at Dayton, Ohio, six hundred and fifty · three thousand nine hundred and fortyhve dollars and eighty-one cents. For current expenses, including construction and repairs, at the Mu""‘k°°· Northwestern Branch, at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, one hundred and sixty thousand nine hundred and thirty-three dollars and nftyseven cents. _ For current expenses, including construction and repairs, at the T°¥“'¤ KN"'- Eastern Branch, at Togus, Maine, one hundred and forty-two thousand one hundred and ninety-one dollars and thirteen cents.