Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 23.djvu/249

 FORTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 332. 1884. 221 titled to be due by the accounting officers of the Treasury Department, sixty thousand dollars. Bounty under act of July twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and Bounty,uct July sixty-six : For payment of amounts of additional bounty under the 26· 1666- act of July twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and sixty six, which may be certified to be due by the accounting officers of the Treasury Department, forty thousand dollars Pay of two and three year volunteers: For payment of amounts to Pay, two and two and three year volunteers who served in the war of the rebellion *·l¤¤¤ y¢¤ v¤1¤¤- which may be certified to be due by the accounting omcers of the Treas- “°'“· ury Department, forty thousand dollars. Army and Navy Hospital at Hot Springs, Arkansas: For supplying Army and Navy the bath·house, main building, and annex with hot and cold mineral H<>_¤Pi*¤·L H¤* waters, eight thousand dollars. SP””g'i nk UNITED STATES MILITARY PRISON AT Boar LEAVENWORTH. IPB the support of the military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas,  States as o ows: ¤¤ P¤‘1¤¤¤» For subsistence for prisoners, ive teamsters, and two watchmeu, $:1}; L°‘"°“' twenty-eight thousand four hundred dollars. AP ,,,.,1,,.;,,,,,,,,, For subsistence for prisoners while being transferred under guard, for-. _ one hundred dollars. I¢¤¤¤¤ For oil, wicking, and for lamps, lanterns, and chimneys for illuminating buildings and grounds, one thousand seven hundred and thirty dollars. For tobacco for prisoners on special or excessive hard labor five hundred and forty dollars. For prisoners iron hunks, bedsacks, hay, and blankets, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-one dollars. For stationery and blank-books for ohices of governor, adjutant, quartermaster; stamped envelopes and- letter-paper for use of prisoners; and for books, periodicals, and newspapers for prison library, nine hundred and fifty dollars. For hard wood, or its equivalent in coal, for making steam, heating, and cooking, and for rubber hose, helting, oil, cotton waste, steam-pipes, and fixtures, twelve thousand seven hundred dollars. For tools and material in shops, laundry, stables, and for police purposes; repair of harness and wagons; disinfectants; horse medicines, tive thousand dollars. For stoves and stove-pipe in buildings not heated by steam, two hundred dollars. For bricks for cisterns and walks, and for copingstone to complete prison-wall, five hundred dollars. For medicines, medical and surgical appliances, and articles required in the care and treatment of the sick; hospital repairs, furniture, one thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars. For expenses for pursuing escaped prisoners and rewards for their capture, three hundred dollars. For donations of five dollars each for prisoners on discharge, one thousand eight hundred dollars. . For advertising for proposals for supplies, one hundred dollars For grain and hay for horses and mules, used exclusively at the prison, three thousand five hundred and seventy one dollars and ninety- seven cents. For pay of civilian employees : One clerk, at one hundred and fifty dollars per month ; one clerk, at one hundred and sixteen dollars and sixty- six cents per month; one clerk, at one hundred dollars per month ; six foremeu of mechanics, at one hundred dollars per month each; two nightwatchmen and five teamsters, at thirty dollars per month each; in all, fourteen thousand one hundred and nineteen dollars and ninety-two cents.