Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/756

 r 732 SIXTY·FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 384. 1910. $3;:;;; NATIONAL Home Fon DISABLED v0LUN·rm.¤:1z SOLDIERS. Bommi For the su ort of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, as folllidws: ¤•y\¤¤.0¤i¤· Central Branch, Dayton, Ohio: For current expenses, namely: Pay of officers and noncommissioned officers of the cme, with such exceptions as are hereinafter noted, and their clerks, weighrnasters, and orderlies; also ayments for cha lains, religious instruction, and entertainment for iihe members of the home, printers, bookbinders, librarians, musicians, telegraph and telephone operators, guards, janitors, watchmen, and iire company; for all prqperty and materials urchased for their use, including repairs not one by the home; lbr necessary expenditures for articles of amusement, li rary books, magazines, papers, pictures, and musical instruments, and for repairs not done by the home; and for stationery, advertising, legal advice, for Qiywg- { d B payments due heirs of deceased members: Provided, That all receipts m¤mii¤.° on account of the effects of deceased members during the fiscal year shall also be available for such payments; and for such other expenditures as can not properly be mc uded under other heads of expenditure, seventy-one thousand dollars; S¤¤¤i¤¢¤¤¤=- For subsistence, namely: Pay of commissary sergeants, commissary clerks, porters, laborers, bakers, cooks, dishwashers, waiters, and others em loyed in the subsistence department; the cost of all articles purchased) for the regular ration, and the subsistence of civilian employees regularly employed and residing at the branch, their frer ht, preparation, and serving; aprons, caps, and Jackets for kitcien and dining—room employees; of tobacco; of all ining—room and kitchen furniture and utensils, bakers’ and butchers’ tools and a pliances, and their relpair not done by the home, two hundred and hit —three thousand dollars; ° neasemw. Igor household, namely: Expenditures for furniture for ofIicers’ quarters; for bedsteads, bedding, bedding material, and all other articles required in the quarters of the members, and of civilian employees permanently employed and residing at the branch, and for their repair, if they are not repaired by the home; for fuel, including fuel for cooking, heat, and light; for engineers and firemen, bath—house keepers, jamtors, laundry employees, and for all labor, materials, and appliances required for household use, and for their repairs, unless the repairs are made by the home, one hundred and twenty-four thousan dollars; H¤¤vitn.L For hospital, namely: Pay of assistant surgeons, matrons, druggists, hospital clerks and stewards, ward masters, nurses, cooks, ~ waiters, readers, drivers, gravediggers, funeral escort, janitors, and for such other services as may be necessary for the care of the sick; burial of the dead; for su ical instruments and appliances, medical books, medicine, liquors, lguits, and other necessaries for the sick not on the regular ration; for bedsteads, bedding, and bedding materials, and all other special articles necessary for the wards, for hospital furniture, including special articles and appliances for hospital kitchen and dining room; carriage, hearse, stretchers, cofiins; or tools of gravedigiers, and for all repairs to hospital furniture and appliances not done y the home, seventy-two thousand dollars; rnmpcmam. or transportation, namely: For transportation of members of the home, three thousand dollars; aepma For repairs, namely: Pay of chief engineer, builders, blacksmiths, carpenters, painters, gas fitters, electrical workers, plumbers, tinsmrths, steam litters, stone and brick masons, whitewashers, and laborers, and for all appliances and materials used under this head; also for repairs of roa s and other improvements of a permanent m,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,_""""°· character, sixty thousand dollars: Provided, That no part of the