Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 25.djvu/586

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540 FIFTIETH CONGRESS. Sess. I. OH. 1069. 1888. solder, blacksmith’s coal, charcoal, glass, putty, nails, shingles. disinfectants, painting materials and paint, brushes, axes, wheel-ban rows, and other articles required for proper police of prison buildings and grounds, for tools and miscellaneous articles required in the sho s, laundry, stables. and bath-rooms, twenty thousand dollars. Ihr materials for manufacture of clothing, for hats and clothing, for wear and use of prisoners while in confinement, and on release from confinement, and for prisoners on release from confinement at military posts, for donations of five dollars each to prisoners on release from confinement in the prison and at military posts, for necessary machines and tools re uired for use in tailor-shops, and for blankets, bed-sacks, and burilrs for prisoners’ use, twelve thousand .four hundred dollars. For medicines, medical and surgical appliances, dressings, and articles required in the care and treatment of sick prisoners; hospital furniture and supplies; stoves and stove-pipe for the hospital, an for ex enses of interment of deceased prisoners, two thousand dollars; hor advertising for proposals for supplies, two hundred dollars; For expenses for pursuing escaped prisoners, and rewards for their capture, three hundred dollars; cxvum employees. or pay of civilian employees: One clerk, at one hundred and fifty dollars per month; one c erk, at one hundred and sixteen dollars and sixty-seven cents per month; one clerk, at one hundred dollars per month; extra-duty pay for prison-guard; six foremen of mechanics, at one hundred dollars per month each; one teamster, at sixty dollars per month; two night-watchmen and four teamsters, at thirty dollars per 'month each; and one fireman, at sixty dollars per mont for six months, from November to April, both months inclusive, to take char e at night of the furnaces, boilers and steam—heating apparatus; in ali sixteen thousand and sixty dollars. Mmm For repair of officers’ and non-commissioned officers’ quarters, the hospital, the chapel, the offices, and all prison buildings and shops, including civilian labor thereon which can not be done by prisoners, five thousand dollars; in all, ninety-two thousand eight hundred dollars. A.-mnery School, Anrinnnnr Scnoon AT Fonranss Mormon, VIRGINIA: To pro-

  • "°"‘““ “°”’°*·“‘· vide for means of instruction, such as text-books. instruments, drawing materials, and stationery, rec uired in the course of engineering,

artillery, law, and the science and art of war, and for other necessary · expenses of the school, five thousand dollars.

 fwlgluufxtgg; NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS.

For the support of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers as follows: Dayton. Ohio. AT THE CENTRAL BRANCH, AT DAYTON, OHIO: For C'l11'1‘6I1t GX- P“" °' °m°°"”‘ °°°‘ penses, namely: Pay of officers and non—commissioned officers of the · cme, with such exceptions as are hereinafter noted, and their clerks and orderlies; also (payments for chaplains and religious instruction, printers, book-bin ers, telegraph and telephone operators, ards. policemen, watchmen, and re company; for all property andumatel rials purchased for their use, including repairs not done by the home; for necessary expenditures for articles of amusement, boats, library books, magazines, papers, pictures, and musical instruments, librarians and musicians, and for re airs not done by the home; also for stationery, advertising, legal adpvice, and postage, and for such other expenditures as can not properly be included under other heads of expenditure, fifty-nine thousand two hundred and seventy-six dollars ang twentyéve cents. 1 P Subsiswnoe- or su sis nee, name y: ay of commissa -ser eants commissary clerks, porters, laborers. and orderlies emplgyeddn the subsistence department; bakers, cooks, dish-washers, waiters, bread-cutters, and