Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 21.djvu/476

 446 FORTYSIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. IH. Ch. 133. 1881. in the science of engineering and of artillery, stationery, and miscella neous necessaries for the use of the school, five thousand dollars. Military prison, Support of military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: For sub. F‘¤r¤L¤¤v¤¤w¤r*·h- sistenoe stores for three hundred and seventy-five prisoners, twenty "'""- thousand five hundred and thirty-one dollars and twenty-five cents, For one thousand eight hundred gallons lard-oil, for illuminating purposes; one hundred pounds of wicking, and for lamps and lanterns (one hundred dollars), one thousand three hundred and ninety dollars. For tobacco for issue to prisoners on special and excessive hard labor, four hundred dollars.· For hay for prisoners’ bedding, three hundred and twenty dollars. For one thousand five hundred cords hard wood, for making steam for heating and cooking purposes and running machinery, nine thousand three hundred and seventy-fnve dollars. For hose for iire-engine and water-tanks ; for belting, machine-oil, and cotton-waste; and for extension and repair of steam circulation, one thousand two hundred dollars. ` For stoves, and stove-pipe, in buildings not heated by steam, one hundred dollars. ` For stationery and blank books for offices of governor, adjutant, and qnartermaster, four hundred dollars. For material for three hundred suits citizen’s clothing, three hundred citizen’s hats, and for donations of five dollars each to three hundred prisoners on discharge, two thousand six hundred and twenty-five dollars. For two hundred straw hats, and for materials for prisoners’ clothing in summer, one thousand and fifty dollars. For medical supplies, one thousand dollars. For twenty thousand paving-bricks, for lining cisterns and repaving walks, and f or stone coping for prison-wall, two thousand two hundred - dollars. For tools and materials in shops: For carpenter’s, one thousand dollars; for farrier’s and blacksmith’s, six hundred dollars; for painter’s, five hundred dollars; for tinner’s, one hundred dollars, for harness, one hundred dollars; for tailor’s, one hundred dollars; for shoe, one hundred dollars; for wheelwrightis, one hundred and nfty dollars; in laundry, one hundred and fifty dollars; for brooms and scrub-brushes two hundred dollars; for miscellaneous stores, drainage of grounds, and disinfectants, one thousand dollars; in all, four thousand dollars. For expenses in pursuit of and for apprehension and delivery of escaped prisoners, two hundred and forty dollars. For pay of two clerks, one in office of governor and disbursing officer, at one hundred and fifty dollars per month, and one in office of prison quartermaster, at one hundred and sixteen dollars and sixty-six cents per month ; two night watchmen, at thirty dollars each per month, guarding grounds and property adjacent to prison; and hve teamsters, at thirty dollar per month each, driving prison teams; in all, nve thousand seven hundred and nineteen dollars and ninety-two cents. For extra-duty pay to eight members of the prison-guard, in charge of working parties, and to one as clerk in office of prison adjutant, at ten dollars and fifty cents per month, seven hundred and ten dollars._ Hire of foremen: For one carpenter, one blacksmith, one engineer in charge of stationary engine and steam-heating apparatus, one engineer in charge of portable engine and machinery in shops, one quarryman, and one stone-mason (six in all),_at one hundred dollars per month each, seven thousand two hundred dollars. For construction and repair of prison buildings, four thousand dollars; in all, sixty-two thousand four hundred and sixty-one dollars and Tr _ t segenteentcgngs. ‘ I tl bi =*·¤¤1°¤, Pau- Uppor o ransient paupers: For care su crt and medica ‘6¤» {’,°f,1:;_ W°'°hmgt°° melltof Seventy-nve transient paupers, meclicafgnd hurgical pati611fS2 in the city of Washington, under a contract to be made with such institution as the Surgeon-General of the Army may select, fifteen thousand dollars.