Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 25.djvu/1017

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

972 ‘ FIFTIETH CONGRESS. SEss. II. Ch. lll. 1889. of the Logan Statue Committee of the Society of the Army of the Tennessee. Gen. wamaem sem SITE AND PEDESTAL 1¤·oR STATUE or GENERAL WINFIELD SCOTT H““°°°k· HANCOCK: For the pre aration of a pedestal for a statue of General Winneld Scott Hancock, in the city of Washington, forty thousand dollars; said site to be selected by, and said pedestal to be erected under, the supervision of the Secretary of War, the chairman of the Joint Committee on the Library, and such other person as the President of the United States may appoint. Mmm? Prim- UNITED STATES MILITARY PRIsoN AT FoRT LEAVENWORTH: Kfpsrv wwvnwcrth, For the sulpport of the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, mgm Kansas, as·fo ows: _ For subsistence for prisoners, nve teamsters and two watchmen; commutation for risoners en route to insane asylum, twenty live thousand one hundred dollars. h Fg? tpbacg} for pgispners on special or excessive hard labor, five un re an orty dollars; d Fcpriinpterials for illuminating buildings and grounds, seven hunre dollars; For forage and bedding for public animals used exclusively at the prison, an ·hay for (prisoners bedding, three thousand dollars; For stationery an blank-books for prison offices, memorandum books, and pencils for the guard, when on duty, postage·stamps, pnvelopes, and letter paper for issue to prisoners, one thousand dollars; For fuel for generating steam for running engines and heating buildings, for steam pipe and fixtures, hose, hose-couplings, belting, machinery and castings, horse and mule shoes, harness—leather, horses an mules, wagons and other articles for transportation, stoves and stove-pipe, bricks, cement, nre clay and nre bricks, iron, tin, solder, blacksmith’s coal, charcoal, glass, putty, nails, shingles, disinfectants, plainting materials and paint, brushes, axes, wheel-barrows, and other articles required for roper police of prison buildings and grounds, for tools and miscellaneous articles required in the shops, laundry, stables, and bath-rooms, and for all necessary explenses (popnection with electric lighting of the prison, twenty ousan dollars. For materials for manufacture of clothing; hats and socks and other articles of clothing not made at the prison but re%uired for the pr1soner’s wear at the prison and on release from con nement, and or prisoners on release from confinement at military posts: for donations of five dollars each to prisoners on release from confinement in th_e prison and at military posts; for necessary machines and tools peqipreid for_use Ill tailor-shopp, anddfpr bllan gtshbiedisacks and un s or risoner s use, nine thousand our un e dollars. For medicines, medical and siugical a liances, dressings, and articles required in the care and treatment gt) sick prisoners; hospital furniture and sudpphes; heating a pliances, and for expense of intermeint ofddecease rpisoners, two thousand dollars; or a vertising or proposals for supplies, two hundred dollars; Fpr explenseshof purguéng escaped prisoners, and rewards for their ca ure, ree un re dollars; hor the transportation of prisoners, on their discharge from the prison, to their ornes or elsewhere, as they may elect, provided the cost ED each arise shag pot ple ggeatieiétpan to the_place of last enlistmen , seven thousand ve un re dollars; Civilianemplnyeea. For pay of civilian employees: One clerk, at one thousand eight hundred dollars per annum; one clerk, at one thousand four hundred dollars per annum; one clerk, at one thousand two hundred dollars per annum; extra-duty pay for prison guard, two thousand four