Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 23.djvu/409

 FORTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. C11. 341. 1885. 381 band, expenses of delegates, until the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and the Secretary of the Interior have approved the same. That jurisdiction is hereby conferred upon the Court of Claims to Court of Claims hear and determine any claim which may be set up by Belva A. Lock- “’.h°”·' Wd .d°""‘ wood against the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians for alleged pro-  f    fessional services rendered to said Eastern Band. wsu ngliing uuid tribe. _ FOB. SUPPORT OF SCHOOLS. is nlp p o r t u r S0 00 B. For support of Indian day and industrial schools, and for other edn- _ Indian day and eational purposes not hereinafter provided for, five hundred and thirty *¤‘1“¤**`*°1 ¤°**°°*¤· thousand dollars; for construction and repair of school buildings, forty °%;,¤stnwmMu_l thousand dollars; and for purchase of horses, cattle, and sheep, goats, R, mgm and swine, for schools, twenty-five thousand dollars; in all, five hun- llslorsss, cattle, dred and ninety-tive thousand dollars: Provided, That the entire cost of ***3;. any boarding-school building to be built from the moneys appropriated  ws, of _ hereby, including furniture, shall not exceed ten thousand dollars; and school buildings. the entire cost of any day-school building to be so built shall not exceed six hundred dollars : And provided further, That the school year of each Promo. pupil in the Indian schools herein appropriated for shall be held to include all usual and necessary vacations: And provided further, That Provico. the Secretary of the Interior shall report annually on or before the first b *****5***1 '°P‘”’*; Monday of December of each year in what manner and for what pur- h;¥mm._ my ° poses the general educational fund lor the preceding fiscal year has been expended and said report shall embrace number and kind of school houses erected and tlwir cost as well as cost of repairs, names of every teacher employed and compensation allowed, the location of each school and the average attendance nt each school, and the first of said annual reports shall give a like full and detailed statement of all such expenditures heretofore made. For support and education of Indian pupils of both sexes at indus- Support and pdtrial schools in Alaska, twenty thousand dollars. ;:‘;:“m°L:g;“ For support of the industrial school near Arkansas City, thirty thou- New Arkansas sand six hundred and twenty-five dollars; and said sum shall be dis. City- burscd upon the basis of an allowance of one hundred and seventy-five dollars for the support and education of each pupil; for purchase of material n nd erection of shops, barns, and other necessary outbuildings, and for n. pairs of same, two thousand dollars; pay of superintendent of said school, one thousand five hundred dollars; in all, thirty-four thousand one hundred and twenty-five dollars; and pupils from any Indian tribe, other than the live civilized tribes of the Indian Territory, may be admitted to this school. For support of Indian industrial school at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Carlisle, Pa and for transportation ol' Indian pupils to and from said school, eighty thousand dollars; and said sum shall be disbursed upon the basis of an allowance not exceeding one hundred and seventy-tive dollars, exclusive of transportation, for the support and education of each pupil actually maintained in and support and education at said school, but actual cost of transportation and other expenses of such pupils as are sent out of said school among farmers for support and education may be disbursed from said funds; for annual allowance to Captain R. H. Pratt, in charge of Payment to R. said Indian industrial school, one thousand dollars; in all, eighty-one H- P¤“· thousand dollars. For support of one hundred and fifty Indian pupils at the Saint Igna- Ss i n t Ignatius tins Mission School, Montana, at one hundred and fifty dollars each, N*¤¤i¢>¤ 6°¤¤°¥· twenty-two thousand five hundred dollars. M°“°‘“"" For support of the Forest Grove Indian Industrial School, at Forest l·‘m-esa 0 mu, Grove. or such other place in Oregon as the same may hereafter be OMS- locuted: Two hundred Indian pupils, at one hundred and seventy-five dollnrs per annum each, thirty-five thousand dollars; pay of superinzmllcnt, one thousand tivelmnd1~eddollnrs; completionofschool-building und m·ncssnx·y ont-buildings, and repairs and fencing, heating apparatus,