Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/436

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FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. II. C11. 301. 1894.. 407 UNITED STATES MILITARY PRISON AT Fontr LEAVENYVORTH. Milit¤¤‘y1>ri¤·>¤»F¤rv Leavenworth, Kaus. For the support of the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Support. as follows: _ · Forsubsistence of prisoners, five teamsters, and two watchmen, and Expenses. for prisoners en route to insane asylum, Washington, District of Columbia, eighteen thousand dollars. For tobacco for prisoners on special or excessive hard labor, three hundred dollars; For forage and bedding for public animals used exclusively at the prison, and hay for prisoners’ bedding, two thousand dollars; For stationery, blank books, typewriting supplies, for use in prison offices, memorandum books for use of guard when on duty, stationery for use in prisoners’ school, postage stamps, envelopes, and letter paper for issue to prisoners, one thousand dollars; For fuel for generating steam for running machinery, heating buildings and cooking purposes; materials for repair of steam-heating apparatus and water circulation; hose, belting, machinery, castings, horses and mules, horse and mule shoes, and nails, stoves and stovepipe, lime, cement, iire clay, nre brick, iron, tin, solder, blacksmiths’ coal,charcoal, putty, nails, paint and white-wash brushes, painting materials, • disiniectants, axes, shovels, spades, wheelbarrows, glass, horse medicines and dressings, articles for police of buildings and grounds, articles for repairing wagons and harness, tools and miscellaneous articles for use in shops, laundry, barber shop, bathrooms, stables, printing office, and photograph gallery; furniture for use in offices; oil and electrical supplies; blankets, bedsacks, and bunks for prisoners’ use, and miscellaneous articles which can not properly be included under other heads of expenditure, twenty thousand dollars; For materials for manufacture of clothing, and to purchase articles of clothing that can not be made at the prison, all for prisoners' wear at prison and issue to prisoners on release from confinement at the prison and at military posts; and for donation of Eve dollars each to prisoners on release from confinement at prison and military posts, eight thousand dollars; For medicines, medical and surgical appliances, dressings, and for all other articles required for the care and treatment of sick prisoners; hospital furniture and supplies, heating appliances, and for expense of interment of deceased prisoners, one thousand five hundred dollars; For advertising for proposals for supplies, one hundred dollars; For expenses of pursuing escaped prisoners, and rewards for their capture, three hundred dollars; For the transportation of prisoners, on their discharge from the prison, to their homes (or elsewhere, as they may elect), provided the cost in each case shall not be greater than to the place of last enlistment, five thousand dollars; For pay of civilian employees: One clerk, at one thousand eight Civimn ¤¤¤r1¤y¤¤¤· hundred dollars; one clerk, at one thousand two hundred dollars; extra-duty pay for prison guard, two thousand two hundred and eighty dollars; five toremen of mechanics and one engineer, at one thousand two hundred dollars per annum each; one teainster at forty dollars per 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 plant; in all, tltteen thousand eight hundred and forty dollars. For construction of buildings and repairs of all buildings on prison MPM. M- grounds, including plumbing and all other civilian labor which can not be done by prison labor, tour thousand dollars. In all, seventy-six thousand and forty dollars. `