Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 42 Part 1.djvu/786

 758 SIXTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 253. 1922. ana; Confederate Cemetery, Point Lookout, Maryland, and Confederate Cemetery, Rock Island, Illinois, $1,250. _ _ umenamsi-1:. BURIAL or nncnasnn INDIGENT PATIENTS2 For burying m the H§,p“{$°‘pI,{§’§,‘3,‘{§'"§ Little Rock (Arkansas) National Cemetery, including transportation mmm! www ¤*· thereto, indigent ex-soldiers, ex-sailors, or ex-marines of the United States service, either Regular or Volunteer, who have been honorably discharged or retired and who die while patients at the Army and Navy General Hospital, Hot Sqrings, Arkansas, to be disbursed at a cost not exceeding $35 for such urial expenses in each case, exclusive of cost of grave, $100. m{’,%l°°°°"‘°""° For repairs and preservation of monuments, tablets, roads, fences, and so forth, made and constructed by the United States in Cuba and China to mark the places where American soldiers fell, $1,000. M<¤¤<=¤1¤¤1>¤¤¤¤¤¢- Mrmrcn. Dnmammivr. Artificial limbs: For furnishing artificial limbs and apparatus, or commutation therefor, and necessa transportation, $35,000. S¤¤=i<=¤¤¤Pl*¤¤¤•¤- Appliances for disabled soldiers: {lor furnishing surgical appliances to persons disabled in the military or naval service of the United States prior to April 6, 1917, and not entitled to artificial limbs or trusses for the same disabilities, $750. '§‘:'§f‘f§';,_ 1116,,,,21;, Trusses for disabled soldiers: For trusses for persons entitled V0, 20 P 353 thereto under section 1176, Revised Statutes of the United States, ' ’ ` and the Act amendatory thereof, approved March 3, 1879, $1,000. m§g*£g,§,“H;¥,f;,‘?* nmmoar. AND suasrcar. msronr or rim womn wan. P'°*’°"°°‘°° °" Toward the reparation for publication under the direction of the Secretary of Wvar of a medical and surgical history of the War with Germany, including personal services, printing and binding at the PWM Govemment Printing Office and the necessary e ra and illusumaemsz. trations, $116,600: Prmrided, That the total cost dlgsughngstory shall not excee $150,000. E¤:i¤<¤¤r¢<¤1>¤· Cours OF Eucmmms. g¤?uii¢ii:1ri?d.?¤wl°d Bmnnnros AND oaomms IN Arm anovmi WASHINGTON. d§;?,',‘€;,.`I,t.Y&3§£‘e$.Sl.Y° d Foitimpgovgxpgrét), care, and maintenance of grounds of executive e a men s,, . mevgiimngm mm gVashington Monument: For custodian, $1,200; for steam engineer, °P°'°°“*¤‘°'°°- $960; for assistant steam e cer, $840; for fireman, $660; for assistant fireman, $660; for conductor of elevator car, $900; for attendants-—one on floor $720, one on top floor $720; for three night and Opwtmgmppim day watchman, at $720 each; in all, $8,820. or fuel, lights, oil, waste, packing, tools, matches, paints, brushes, brooms, lanterns, rope, nails, screws, lead, electric liglhts, heating apparatus, oil stoves_ for elevator car and upper and ower floors; repairs to engines, boilers, dynamos, elevator, and re airs of all kinds connected with the Monument and machinery; and) purchase of all necessary articles for keepinig the Monument, machinery, elevator, Sums, °pemg_ and electric plant in good or er, $6,000. For_ extra services of employees and for additional sup lies and materials to provide for the opening of the Monument to the public Imamng enema on Sundays and legal holidays, $2,500. ¤¤¢¤=¤>¤¤¤¤¤·=•¤s· The foregoing appro riations for the Washington Monument shall be immediately available to the extent required to rovide conduit ggmion of mm and cable installations for securing electric current for power, l` ht, wm completed. and heat, and to provide payment therefor: Proznkled, That when