Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 26.djvu/1034

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FIETY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. II. OH. 542. 1891. t 98I prison for pr1s0ners’ wear at prison and issue to prisoners when reeased from confinement at prison and at military posts; for donations_of 1'ive dollars each to prisoners on release from continement at prison and at military posts; for blankets, bed sacks, and bunks for PHSODGQ, use, nine thousand four hundred dollars; _ For medicines, medical and surgical appliances, dressings, and ar ticles required in the care and treatment of sick prisoners; hospital furniture and supplies; heating appliances, and for expense of interment of decease prisoners, two thousand dollars- ` For advertising for proposals for supplies, two hundred dollars; For expenses o pursuing escaped prisoners, and rewards for their capture, three hundred do lars; or pay of civilian employees: One clerk, at one thousand eight civmn empioyeu. hundred dollars per annum; one clerk, at one thousand four hundred dollars per annum; one clerk, at one thousand two hundred dollars per annum; duty-extra Ipay for prison guard, two thousand three hundred and twenty dollars; five foreinen of mechanics and one engineer, at one thousand two hundred dollars per annum each; one forage and wagon master, at sixty dollars per month; oneteamster, at forty dollars lper month; two night watchmen and four teamsters, at thirty dollars per month each; and one fireman, at sixty dollars per month, to take charge at night of the heating apparatus and electric light; in all, eighteen thousand dollars; I For construction and repair of oiIicers’ quartersilprison buildings, Rq,,,;,,_ M_ the hospital, the chapel, stables, and all other bdings on prison grounds, including p umbing. and all other work thereon which can not be done by prisoners’ labor, five thousand dollars; In all, eighty-three thousand two hundred dollars. ' NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. Nations] Home for Disabied Volunteer For the su rt of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, as fdllbws: AT THE CENTRAL BRANCH, AT DAYToN, OHIO: For current ex- Dayton, Ohio. •enses, namely: Pay of officers and non-commissioned officers of the mor cancers, crcllome, with such exceptions as are hereinafter noted, and their clerks and orderlies.; also payments for chaplains and religious instructions, rinters, bookbinders, telegraph and telephone operators, guards, policemen, watchmen, and fire company; or all property and materials purchased for their use, including repairs not done by the Home; for necessary expenditures for articles of amusement, boats, librar books, ma azines, papers, {pictures, and musical instruments, lihrarians and; musicians, and 'or repairs not done byathe Home; also for stationery, advertising, legal advice, and pos e, and for such other expenditures as can not properly be inclumid under other heads of expenditure; sixty-three thousand and thirty six dollars and eighty cents; For subsistence, namely: Pay of commissary sergeants, commis- Subsistence. sary clerks, porters, laborers, and orderlies employe in the subsistence department; bakers, cooks, dish-washers, waiters, bread-cutters, and butchers; the cost of all animals, fowls, and fish purchased for provisions; of all articles of fogd, their freigiht, preparation, and serving; of tobacco; of all dining-room and itchen urniture and utensils, bakers’ and butchers’ too s and appliances, and their re ir, not done by the Home, three hundred an thirty five thousandpbne hundred and sixty-five dollars and ten cents; For elothing, namely: Expenditures for clothing, under-clothing, mm; boots, shoes, socks, and overalls; also all sums expended for labor, materials, machines, tools, and appliances employed in the tailorshop, knitting-shop, and shoe shop, or other Home shops in which guy kind of olothing is made, eighty-seven thousand Eve hundred 9 3