The Journal of Prison Discipline and Philanthropy, March 1912 New Series No. 51
Part 5
GEORGIA R. R. Fare Full suit
IDAHO $10.00 Clothing to value of $10.00
ILLINOIS $10.00 & R. R. Fare Complete suit, and in winter an overcoat.
INDIANA $10.00 & R. R. Fare, if released Tailor-made suit and at expiration of sentence complete outfit. Overcoat from Nov. 1 to $5.00 & R. R. Fare, if paroled. April 1.
IOWA $5.00 & R. R. Fare Tailor-made suit and outfit: overcoat when needed.
KANSAS “Our prisoners are paid a Tailor-made woolen suit, wage of about a dollar a & complete outfit. month, and they have this money when discharged.” Chouteau Fund of $1,000 constantly on hand, raised by contributions from the prisoners, and sale of trinkets; used in caring for needy families of prisoners and in aiding worthy prisoners in making a new start.
KENTUCKY $5.00 & R. R. Fare Complete suit
LOUISIANA $5.00 Complete suit
MAINE “Not to exceed $10.00” “Suitable and decent” clothing.
MARYLAND $10.00 to $100 earned by “Entire new outfit ... over-work. $2.00 to $15.00 presentable anywhere.” to indigent prisoners.
MASSACHUSETTS $3.00 to $5.00 Entire suit. Overcoat Oct. 1st to April 1st
MICHIGAN $7.50 to $15.00 Full suit
MINNESOTA $25.00 and earnings, from Complete suit. Overcoat nothing to $500 Oct. 1st to April 1st
MISSISSIPPI $10.00 Full suit
MISSOURI $5.00 & R. R. Fare Complete outfit and overcoat when needed.
MONTANA $5.00 Clothing allowance of $15.00.
NEBRASKA $5.00 to $10.00 & R. R. “Everything a man wears Fare except overcoat”
NEVADA $25.00, “with no strings tied “Same clothing they had to it whatever.” when brought here.” It is cared for and pressed. If they lack any clothing, they may use their “discharge money.”
NEW HAMPSHIRE $10.00 New suit
NEW JERSEY $5.00 to $25.00, according to “Full black suit,” and the length of sentence. R. R. other furnishings. Overcoat Fare, except to the pardoned in winter. and paroled.
NEW MEXICO $5.00 Complete suit
NEW YORK $10.00 & R. R. Fare. In addition Complete suit. Overcoat earnings which may Nov. to April. amount to 1½c per diem.
NORTH CAROLINA $7.20 per annum, “on good “Good suit” behavior.”
NORTH DAKOTA $5.00 to $25.00 and earnings. Complete outfit R. R. Fare. “After a prisoner has credit of $25.00 one-half earnings will still be credited and the other half to General Inmates’ Benefit Fund; or five-sixths of earnings will be sent to dependent relatives, and one-sixth to the prisoner’s account.”
OHIO $5.00 & R. R. Fare Necessary clothing
OKLAHOMA R. R. Fare Full suit
OREGON $5.00 Full new suit
PENNSYLVANIA $5.00 or $10.00 Shoes and socks. Remainder Eastern furnished by Penitentiary Penna. Prison Society. Clothing to the value of Western $5.00 or $10.00 $10.00 in accordance with Penitentiary Legislative appropriation.
RHODE ISLAND $5.00 & R. R. Fare Complete suit
SOUTH CAROLINA R. R. Fare Full suit
SOUTH DAKOTA $5.00 and earnings Outfit to the value of $10.00
TENNESSEE R. R. Fare and small Citizen’s suit and their amount of money working clothes
TEXAS $5.00 discharge money. 10c Full suit per day for each day served in prison and R. R. Fare
UTAH $5.00 to $15.00 Complete new suit
VIRGINIA $2.00 to $5.00 and earnings “Good suit”
W. VIRGINIA $2.00 to $3.00 and earnings “Good suit”
VERMONT $1.00 per week till the sum They buy their own of $100 is reached clothes
WASHINGTON $5.00 and R. R. Fare New good suit
WISCONSIN $8.58 at end of first year Full suit and about 1c per day thereafter. R. R. Fare. Earnings for overtime may be sent to families, be used for fruit, or credited to their account.
WYOMING $50.00, of which not less than $15.00 must be spent for clothing
HONORARY MEMBERS.
Maud Ballington Booth New York City. [1]Gen. R. Brinkerhoff Mansfield, Ohio. Z. R. Brockway Elmira, N. Y. Judge McKenzie Cleland Chicago, Ill. Prof. Charles Richmond Henderson Chicago, Ill. Judge Ben. B. Lindsey Denver, Colo. [1]Frederick Howard Wines Springfield, Ill.
[1] Deceased.
AN ACT.
To define the rights and functions of official visitors of jails, penitentiaries, and other penal or reformatory institutions, and providing for their removal.
Section 1. Be it enacted, &c., That any person designated by law to be official visitor of any jail, penitentiary, or other penal or reformatory institution, in this Commonwealth, maintained at the public expense, is hereby authorized and empowered to enter and visit any such jail, penitentiary, or other penal or reformatory institution, on any and every day, including Sundays, between the hours of nine o’clock, ante meridian, and five o’clock, post meridian; and not before nine o’clock, ante meridian, or after five o’clock, post meridian, except with the special permission of the warden, manager, overseer, or superintendent in charge of any such jail, penitentiary, or other penal or reformatory institution.
Section 2. Upon any such visit of any official visitor to any such jail, penitentiary, or other penal or reformatory institution, such visitor shall have the right to interview privately any prisoner or inmate confined in any such jail, penitentiary, or other penal reformatory institution, and for that purpose to enter the cell, room, or apartment wherein any such prisoner or inmate shall be confined: Provided, however, That if any warden, manager, overseer, superintendent, or person in charge of such institution at the time of such visit, shall be of the opinion that such entry by the official visitor into the cell, room, or apartment of such prisoner or inmate would be dangerous to the discipline of the institution, then and in that case the said warden, superintendent, overseer, manager, or person in charge, may conduct any prisoner or inmate, with whom such official visitor may desire a private interview, into such other cell, room, or apartment within the institution as he may designate and there permit the private interview between the official visitor and such prisoner or inmate to take place: Provided further, however, That no official visitor shall have the right or power of privately interviewing any such prisoner or inmate except prisoners or inmates of the same sex as such official visitor.
Section 3. All powers, functions, and privileges heretofore belonging to official visitors of jails, penitentiaries, and penal or reformatory institutions, under the common statute laws, are hereby confirmed: Provided, however, That no such official visitor shall have the right or power to give or deliver to any prisoner or inmate of any such jail, penitentiary, or penal or reformatory institution, during such visit, any chattel or object whatsoever, except objects and articles of religious or moral instruction or use.
Section 4. If any such official visitor shall violate any of the prohibitions herein contained, any warden, manager, overseer, or superintendent of any such jail, penitentiary, penal or reformatory institution, may apply to any court of common pleas in the county wherein such institution may be situated, for a rule upon such visitor to show cause why he or she should not be deprived of his or her office; and upon proof to the satisfaction of said court being made, such court shall enter a decree against such official visitor, depriving him or her of all rights, privileges, and functions of official visitor.
APPROVED--The 14th day of May, A. D. 1909.
EDWIN S. STUART.
AN ACT TO INCORPORATE THE
Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons
SECTION 1.--_Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in General Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same_, That all and every the persons who shall at the time of the passing of this Act be members of the Society called “The Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons,” shall be and they are hereby created and declared to be one body, politic and corporate, by the name, style and title of “The Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons,” and by the same name shall have perpetual succession, and shall be able to sue and be sued, implead and be impleaded in all courts of record or elsewhere, and to take and receive, hold and enjoy, by purchase, grant, devise, or bequest to them and their successors, lands, tenements, rents, annuities, franchises, hereditaments, goods and chattels of whatsoever nature, kind, or quality soever, real, personal, or mixed, or choses in action, and the same from time to time to sell, grant, devise, alien, or dispose of; _provided_ That the clear yearly value or income of the necessary houses, lands, tenements, rents, annuities, and other hereditaments, and real estate of the said corporation, and the interest of money by it lent, shall not exceed the sum of five thousand dollars; and also to make and have a common seal, and the same to break, alter, and renew at pleasure; and also to ordain, establish, and put in execution such by-laws, ordinances, and regulations as shall appear necessary and convenient for the government of the said corporation, not being contrary to this Charter or the Constitution and laws of the United States, or of this Commonwealth, and generally to do all and singular the matters and things which to them it shall lawfully appertain to do for the well-being of the said corporation, and the due management and ordering of the affairs thereof; and provided further, that the objects of the Society shall be confined to the alleviation of the miseries of public prisons, the improvement of prison discipline and relief of discharged prisoners.
SAM’L ANDERSON, _Speaker of House_, THOS. RINGLAND, _Speaker of Senate_.
Approved the 6th day of April, Anno Domini Eighteen Hundred and Thirty-three.
GEORGE WOLF.
LEGAL CHANGE OF NAME
The Following Confirms the Action Relative to the Change of the Name of the Prison Society
Decree:
And now, to wit, this 27th day of January, A. D. 1886, on motion of A. Sidney Biddle, Esq., the Petition and Application for change of name filed by “The Philadelphia Society for Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons,” having been presented and considered, and it appearing that the order of court heretofore made as to advertisement has been duly complied with and due notice of said application to the Auditor-General of the State of Pennsylvania being shown, it is Ordered, Adjudged, and Decreed, that the name of the said Society shall hereafter be “THE PENNSYLVANIA PRISON SOCIETY,” to all intents and purposes as if the same had been the original name of the said Society, and the same name shall be deemed and taken to be a part of the Charter of the said Society upon the recording of the said Application with its indorsements and this Decree in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of this County, and upon filing with the Auditor-General a Copy of this Decree.
(Signed) JOSEPH ALLISON.
Record:
Recorded in the office for the Recording of Deeds in and for the City and County of Philadelphia, on Charter Book No. 11, page 1064. Witness my hand and seal of Office this 28th day of June, A. D. 1886.
GEO. G. PIERIE, Recorder of Deeds.
[Transcriber’s Note:
Obvious printer errors corrected silently.
Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.]