Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 23.djvu/536

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508 FORTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. H. CII. 360. 1885 Armsj Md NNW MAINTENANCE or Amir AND NAVY HOSPITAL, Her SPRINGS, AR.- g"$’l"tX;& H°* KANSAS : For means of transportation for use of the hospital and mampm]g°’tenance of the same ; hire of employees (steward, apofficcary, clerk, Butler, cooks, wardmasters, nurses. engineer, laundresses, and all nec— essary service); medicines, hospital stores, dressings, instruments, fuel, gas, ice, stationery, and other necessary expenses, nineteen thousand dollars. Military convicts. Fon THE EXPENSES OF MILITARY GONVIGTS: For payment of costs and charges of State penitentiaries for the care, clothing, maintenance, and medical attendance of United States military convicts coniined in them, ten thousand dollars. Publication of Fon THE PUBLICATION on THE OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE WAR or U¤i¤¤ ¤¤ ¤¤*`A¤— the New England Soldiers’ Relief Association, five thousand five hungumhug 9, mb: dred dollars. O! Bp6ft8H1H1g . _ Erection ofstatuc For the purpose of erecting a statue, with suitable emblematic devices }¤ my of WM- thereon, on one of the public reservations in the city of Waslringto

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uE:,£:§‘;;{ so {lhs memory of General La Fayette and his compatriots, nity thousanld

ette. dollars- Selecticnofnite, That the Secretary of War, the chairman of the Joint Committee on 0*- the Library, and the Architect of the Capitol are authorized to contract for and erect the said statue, and to designate a suitable public reservation in the city of Washington as the site for said statue. UNITED srA·rEs MILITARY PRISON AT Boxer LEAvENwo1zr1I. m SEP;;; $01:, Eg Hligmi (tire; support of the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas $_‘;’\:h_L ° ° " ° ” ‘ For subsistence for prisoners, five teamsters, and two watchman, I,_,,m,,_ twenty-eight thousand four hundred dollars. For oil, wicking, and for lamps, lanterns, and chimneys for illuminat- Lmgl buildings and grounds, one thousand seven hundred and thirty o ars; For tobacco for prisoners on special or excessive hard labor, fivehundred and thrty dollars, ‘ For hay for prisoncr’ bedding, five hundred and fortv two dollars and fourteen cents; ` For grain and hay for horses and mules, used exclusivelv at the prison three thousand five hundred and seventy-two dollars ;’ For stationery and blank books for offices of governor adjutant quartermaster; stamped envelopes and letter paper for use ot prisoners ; and