Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/288

 FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 232. 1894. 259 For new hospital ward, for male patients, to accommodate twenty- New wanifive beds, four thousand dollars. Fon Rnnomr Sonoor.: For superintendent, one thousand live Refom ¤¤¤¤<>¤· hundred dollars; assi tant superintendent, nine hundred dollars; teachers and assistant teachers, three thousand five hundred dollars; matron of school, six hundred dollars; three matrons of families, at one hundred and eighty dollars each; three foremen of workshops, 'at six hundred and sixty dollars each; farmer, four hundred and eighty dollars; engineer, three hundred a11d ninety-six dollars; one assistant engineer, three hundred dollars; baker, cook, shoemaker, and tailor, at three hundred dollars each; laundress, one hundred and eighty dollars; two dining room servants, seamstress, and chambermaid, at one hundred and forty-four dollars each; florist, three hundred and sixty dollars; watchmen, not exceeding live in number, one thousand one hundred and forty dollars; secretary and treasurer of board of trustees, six hundred dollars; in all, fourteen thousand two hundred and fifty-two dollars. For support of inmates, including groceries, ilour, feed, meats, dry $¤1>r¤r¤ of inmatesgoods, leather, shoes, gas, fuel, hardware, tableware, furniture, farm implements and seeds, harness and repairs to same, fertilizers, books, stationery, plumbing, painting and glazing, medicines and medical attendance, stock, fencing, repairs to buildings, and other necessary · items, including compensation, not exceeding nine hundred dollars, for additional labor or services, and for transportation and other necessary expenses incident to securing suitable homes for discharged boys, not exceeding five hundred dollars, all under the control of the Commissioners, twenty-nve thousand five hundred dollars. Fon SUPPORT OF THE INSANE. I For support of the indigent msane of the District of Columbia in $**1*90** ·>f i¤¤¤¤¤- the Government Hospital for the Insane in said District as provided in sections forty-eight hundred and forty-four and forty-eight hundred R. s.,m¤.4w,4eao, and fifty of the Revised Statutes. ninety-six thousand four hundred *’*"°3?‘°‘°‘ and eighty dollars. Fon INSTRUCTION OF THE DEAF AND DUMB: For expenses attend- ,uf_’°I}j_‘Q,*f;,}';§f,f‘;{,if° ing the instruction of deaf and dumb persons admitted to the Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb from the District of Columbia, under section forty-eight hundred and sixty-four of the Revised Statutes, ten 1<-S-.¤¤¤-4864·v·¤4¤- thousand five hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary; and all disbursements for this object shall be accounted for through the Department of the Interior. Fon CHARITIES. o1m·1u¤¤. For relief of the r, fourteen thousand dollars. _ sum at the mr. For a municipal lordging house and wood and stone yard, four thousand h,,}:,`},'}?:}?`! mgmg dollars. For the Temporary Home for Ex-Union Soldiers and Sailors, two s0:?hq:_.w·r:rdy__l¤1:r¤;=¢· thousand five hundred dollars. _ _` For the \\'on1en’s Christian Association, maintenance, four thousand A$*;j?,;j,_Ch”“’“" dollars. ` For the Central Dispensary and Emergency Hospital, maintenance, m1H¤¤¤rz¤¤¤s Hewitwelve thousand dollars._ _ For the Columbia Hospital for Women and Lying-in Asylum, maintc— °°"““b“ H°°*""'· nance, twenty thousand dollars; for an addition, ten thousand dollars; in all, thirty thousand dollars. _ _ _ For the Children’s Hospital, maintenance, ten thousand dollars. C*“***”'*°H°°P““l· For the National Homeopathic Hospital Association ofWashington, miiomwpaenscnospi- District of Columbia, for maintenance, eight thousand dollars. ‘ For the Freedmen’s Hospital and Asylum, as follows : Freedman., Hosp, For subsistence, twenty-two thousand five hundred dollars; ui.