Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 38 Part 1.djvu/58

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

SIXTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 3. 1913. 39 5},000, respectively, to be disbiused lx the authorities of said hospitals, and to be paid one-half out of e revenues of the District of olumbia. and one-half out of the Treasury of the United States; in all, $2,500. Namonan norm ron nrsannnn vonmrrnns sonnrnns. golilgggifjg §,g§ggm{g; For the support of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer S°i>di°r$t1°Sd° will D on F xgtmes 61 ent ranc , ayton, 'o: or cmrent e , nam : D*Y**;”»,g'=i°- Pay of officers and noncommissioned officcrs of the ome, with sugh Cum t exceptions as are hereinafter noted, and their clerks, weighmasters, and orderhes; also tplayments for chszplpins, religious instruction, and entertainment for e members of home, printers, bookbinders, librarians, musicians, telegraph and telephone operators, guards, j anitors, watchman, and iire company; for all property and materials purchased for their use, including repairs not done by the home; for necessary expenditures for articles of amusement, library books, magazines, (papers, pictures, and musical instruments, pand for · gens not one by the home;_and for stationery, advertising, le al vice for payments due heirs of deceased members: Promd%d' , §g$§·°, Mmm That all receipts on account of the effects of deceased members membem the fiscal year shall also be available for such ayments; and for suc other expenditures as can not properly be u ed under other heads of expenditure, $62,000. S For subsistence, namely: Pay of commissary sergeants, commis- "hm°"°°` sary clerks, porters, laborers, akers, cooks, dishwashers, waiters, an others employed m the subsistence department; the cost of all articles purchased for the regular ration, and the subsistence of civilian employees regularly employed and residing at the branch, their freigit, preparation, and serving; aprons, caps, and 'ackets for kitc en and dining-room employees; of tobacco; of all cliniugilroom andhltngtchen fugniture and utensil? bak§rs’ butchers’ too and a ces, an ° re not one the cme, $260,000· · Pgor household namelly':EExpendituredY for furniture for officers’ H°°'°h°‘d‘ quarters; for bedsteads, bedding, bedding material, and all other articles required in the quarters of the members, and of civilian employees permanently employed and residing at the branch, and for their repair, if they are not repaired by the home; for fuel, including fuel for cooking, heat, an light; for engineers and firemen, bathhouse keepers, janitors, laundiiy employees, and for all labor, materials, and alppliances required or household use, and for their repyairs unless the repairs are made by the home, $115,000; Hmm _ or hospital, name y: Pay of assistant surgeons, matrons, druggl8§8, hospital clerks and stewards, ward masters, nurses, cooks, waiters, readers, drivers, funeral escort, janitors, and for such other services as may be necessary for the care of the sick; burial of the dead; for surgical instruments and appliances, medical books, medicine, liquors, fruits, and other necessaries for the sick not on the ripiilar ration; for bedsteads, bedding, and bedding materials, other special articles necessary for the wards; for hospital furniture, including special articles and appliances for hospital kitchen and dlD.l11%1 room- carriage, hearse, stretchers, cofhns; and for all §eip)8g16S0t0 oepital furniture and appliances not done by the home, For tmmpertation, namely: For transportation of members of '"‘“"’°"““""· the home, §1,500; For repami, namely: Pay of chief engineer, builders, blacksmiths, R°*‘“‘* carpenters, painters, gas litters, electrical workers, plumbers, tmsnntlm, steam litters, stone and brick masons, whitewasheis, and