Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 32 Part 1.djvu/544

 478 FIFTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. C11. 1301. 1902. ,e,*}§§,‘[‘;‘,$·‘· °*- *’°“*‘ Uivrrnn Srrurns rnnrrnmmar, Armnn, Gnonen: For support of " the United States penitentiary at Atlanta, Georgia, as follows: ”*““°°¤*°°°· For subsistence, including supplies for prisoners, warden, and deputy warden, tobacco for prisoners; kitchen and dining-room furniture and utensils; farm and garden seeds and implements, and for purchase of ice if necessary, twenty-five thousand dollars; Cl°¤*i¤¢·°¤=· For clothing and transportation, including such clothing as can be made at the penitentiary; for the usual gratuities as provided by law to prisoners at release, including transpprtation to place of conviction or place of bona fide residence in the nited States; for expenses of penitentiary officials while traveling on duty; for expenses incurred in identifying and pursuing escaped prisoners, and or rewards for their recapture, twe ve thousand ollars; ’"“°°“"‘°°“”· For miscellaneous expenditures, in the discretion of the Attorney- General, for fuel, forage, hay, light, water, stationery, blank books, blank forms, typewriting supplies, pencils and memorandum books for guards, boo s for use in chape, paper envelopes, and postage stamps for issue to prisoners; for labor and materials for repairing steam heatin plant, electric plant, water circulation, and draina e; for labor auf materials for construction and repair of buildings; ger general supplies, machinery, and tools for use on farm and in shops, brickyard, quarry, limekiln, laundry, bathrooms, printing office, photograph gallery, stables; policing buildings and grounds; for the purchase of horses, mules, wagons, harness, veterinary supplies, ubricating oils, office furniture, stoves, blankets, bedding, 1ron bunks, _ paints an oils, library books, newspapers and periodicals; electrical supplies; for payment of water supply; for telegrams, telephone service, notarial and veterinary services; for advertising in newspapers; for fees to consulting physicians called to determine mental condition of supposed-insane prisoners, and for other services in cases of emergency; and for pay of extra guards when deemed necessary by the Attorney-General, fifteen thousand dollars; H°°°"“]· For hospital supplies, including purchase of medicines, surgical instruments, and suppgies, and all other articles required for the care and treatment of sic prisoners, and for expenses of interment of deceased prisoners, one thousand ive hundred dollars; S“1“”°“‘ For salaries, including pay of officials and employees, as follows: Warden, four thousand do lars; deputy warden, two thousand dollars; chaplain, one thousand five hundrec dollars; chief clerk, one thousand eig t hundred dollars; physician, one thousand six hundred dollars; bookkeeper and record clerk, one thousand two hundred dollars; steno rapher, nine hundred dollars; engineer, one thousand two hundred dollars; assistant engineer, nine hundred dollars; captains of watch, one thousand eight hundred dollars; steward and storekeeper, nine hundred dollars; superintendent of farm and transportation, one thousand dollars; two teamsters. one thousand two hundred dollars; cook, baker, tailor, and blacksmith, at seven hundred and twent dollars each; guards, twentv-one thousand six hundred dollars; in ali, forty- four thousand four hundred and eighty dollars; In all, ninety-seven thousand nine hundred and eighty dollars. D°P°"'-”*—`”""S”*'*’· DEPARTMENT OF STATE. ,,QQ°,f,f,°,f,$m§$,§“” _ Toward the proper proportional expenses of the United States for inspection and repair of the monuments marking the boundary line between the United States and Mexico, to be ex nded under the direction of the Secretary of State, five thousand dollars. ugisimve. UNDER LEGISLATIVE. 9****; Smrmrn: To enable the Secretary of the Senate to pa to Thomas
 * lirimces.G. mmm G. Garrett, as provided by Senate resolution of March nidth, nineteen