Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/1452

 1428 SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 285. 1911. room furniture and utensils, and for farm and garden seeds and implements, and for purchase of ice if necessary, forty thousand dollars; c1etm¤g,ew. For clothing, transportation, and traveling expenses, rncludrng . such clothing as can be made at the pemtentrary; for the usua gratuities as provided by law to prisoners at release, including transportation to place of conviction or place of bona fide res1dencein the United States; for expenses of shipping remains of deceased prisoners to their homes in the United States; for expenses of penitentiary officials while traveling on duty; for expenses incurred rn identifying and pursuing escaped prisoners, an for rewards for their recapture, thirty-two thousand dollars; _ _ . Miscellaneous. For miscellaneous expenditures rn the discretion of the Attorney ' General, for fuel, forage, hay, light, water, stationery, purchase of fuel for generating steam, heating apparatus, burmng bric s and lrrne; for e for issue to public animals, and hay and straw for bedding; blaliir books, blank forms, ty writing supplies, lpencrls and memorandum books for guards, bool; for use in chape, paper, envelopes, and postage stamps for issue to prisoners; for labor and materials for repairing steam-heating plant, electric plant and water circulation, and drainage; for labor and materials for construction and repair of buildings for general supplies, machinery, and tools for use on farm and in shops, brickyar, quarry, limekrln, laundry, bathrooms printing office, photogiaph gallery, stables, policing buildings and grounds; for the purc use o cows, horses, mules, wagons, harness, veterinary supplies, lubricating oils, office furniture, stoves, blankets bedding, iron unks, paints and oils, library books, newspapers and periodicals, and electrical supplies;_ for payment of water supply, telegrams, telephone service, notarral 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; for pay of extra guards or employees when deemed necessary by the Attomey Genera, and for expense of care and medical treatment of dguards who may be injured by prisoners while said guards are en eavoring to prevent escapes or suppressing mutiny, forty thousand dollars; H"'P"°‘- For hospita supp es, inc uding purchase of medicines, medical and surgical supplies, and all other articles for the care and treatment of sick prisoners; and for expenses of interment of deceased prisoners, two thousand five hundred dollars; ‘ sums;. For salaries, including pay of officials and employees as follows: Warden, four thousand dollars; deputy warden, two thousand dol- · lars; chaplain, one thousand five hundred dollars; chaplain, six hundred dollars; physician, one thousand six hundred dollars; chief clerk, one thousand eight hundred dollars; bookkeeper and record clerk, one thousand two hundred dollars; stenogra her, nine hundred , dollars; four clerks, at nine hundred dollars eacli; head cook, one thousand dollars; steward and storekeeper, one thousand two hundr·ed dollars; superintendent of farm and transportation, nine hundred dollars; three captains of watch, at one thousand dollars each; guards, at seventy dollars per month each, fifty-two thousand and eighty dollars; two teamsters, at six hundred dollars each; engineer and electrician, one thousand five hundred dollars; assistant engineer and electrician, one thousand two hundred dollars; in all, seventy- nine thousand two hundred and eighty dollars; For foremen, shoemaker, harness maker, carpenter, laundryman, blacksmith, tailor, and tinner, when necessary, four thousand eight hundred dollars; _ In all, for penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas, one hundred and ninety-eight thousand five hundred and eighty dollars. g;g*g;g·,g§_ aslggrisvurpport of the United States Penitentiary at Atlanta, Georgia,