Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 26.djvu/458

 404 FIFTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 837. 1890. For expenses of pursuing escaped prisoners, and rewards for their ca ture, three hundred dollars; hor the trans ortation of prisoners, on their discharge from military prison, to iiheir homes or elsewhere, as they may elect, provided the cost in each case shall not be greater than to the place of last enlistment, seven thousand five hundred dollars; Gvmsn cmnloyws. For pay of civilian employees: One clerk, at one thousand eight hundred dollars per annum; one clerk, at one thousand four hundred dollars per annum; one clerk, at one thousand two hundred dollars per a11num· extra-duty pay for prison guard, two thousand four undred dollars; Eve foremen of mechanics and one engineer, at one thousand two hundred dollars per annum each; one forage and wa on-master, at sixty dollars per month; one teamster, at forty dollars per month; two night watohmen 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; in all, eighteen thousand and eighty dollars; mevsimcm For construction of necessary buildings (such as out houses, and repair of officers’ quarters, prisoners’ buildings, the hospital, the chapel, stables, and all other buildings on prison grounds, including plumbing and all other civilian labor thereon which can not be ' done by prison labor, nve thousand dollars; in all, ninety thousand seven hundred and eighty dollars. d;;¤<>¤:1dL1;>tr::r:gl{ NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. Soggr the spgport of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer iers, as o ows: n•.m¤,0mo. Ar run CENTRAL Bmucn, AT DAYTON, O1-no: For current excny ummm. penses, namely: Pay of officers and nomcommissioned officers of the home, with such exceptions as are hereinafter noted, and their clerks and orderlies; also payments for chaplains and religious instruction, printers, book bin ers, telefgraph and telephone operators, guards, po icemen, watchmen, and re company; for all property and materials 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, li rarians and musicians, and for repairs not done by the home; also for stationery, advertising legal advice, and posta e, and for such other expenditures as can not properly be incluid undlerdogier heads of expenditure, sixty-three thousand and fifty ei t dollars; 8¤¤¤i¤w¤<=¤- lor subsistence, namely: Pay of commissary-sergeants, commissary clerks, porters, laborers, and orderlies employe in the subsistence department ; bakers, cooks, dish-washers, waiters, bread—cutters, and butchers; the cost of all animals, fowls, and fish purchased for provisions; of all articles of food; their freight. pre aration, and serving; of tobacco; of all dining-room and kitchen Furniture and utensils, bakers’ and butchers’ tools and appliances, and their repair, not done by the home, three hundred and fifty-five thousand seven hundred and ninety-eight dollars and seventy cents ; Cwthinz- For clothing, namely z Expenditures, for clothing, underclothing, boots, shoes, socks, and overalls; also all sums expended for labor, · materials, machines, tools, and appliances employed in the tailor shop, knitting-shop, and shoe-shop, or other home shops in which any kind of clothing is made, eighty-seven thousand four hundred and seventy-two dollars and sixty-four cents ; ¤¤¤¤¤<>¤¤¤¤v¤¤=¤=¤ For household, namely ; Expenditures. for furniture for officers’ qlparters; for bedsteads, bedding, and all other articles required in t e quarters of the members, and for their repair, if they are not repaired by the home; for coal and fire-wood; for engineers and firemen, bath-house keepers, hall-cleaners, laundrymen, gas makers,