Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 1.djvu/1025

 SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. III. GH. 192. 1911. 1001 For temporary services, not to exceed five hundred dollars; E=r¤¤¤¤=- For maintenance, includin purchase and care of horses, wagons, and harness, six thousand dogars; For furniture and manual-training equipment, four hundred and fiftiy dollars; · or re airs and improvements to buildings and grounds, five hundred dollars; In all, for Industrial Home School for Colored Children thirteen _ thousand nine hundred and thirty dollars: Provided, That all moneys mg ,,0,,, me received at said school as income from sale of products and from <>*1>¤>d¤¢*¤· °**=- payment of board of instruction, or otherwise, shall be paid over to the Commissioners of the District of Columbia to be expended by them in the support of the school during the fiscal year nineteen hundred and twe ve. _ INDUSTRIAL Honm Scn0oL: Superintendent, one thousand five SQ§‘§,§‘f°’*“l H°‘“° . hundred dollars; matron, four hundred and eighty dollars; three S¤1¤¤i¢¤- matrons, at three hundred and sixty dollars each; two assistant matrons, at three hundred dollars each; housekeeper, three hundred and sixty dollars; sewingl teacher, three hundred and sixty dollars; nurse, three hundred dollars; manual-training teacher, six hundred dollars; florist, eight hundred and forty dollars; engineer, seven hundred and twenty dollars; farmer, five hundred and forty dollars; cook, two hundred and fortgs dollars; laundress, two hundred and forty dollars; two housemai, at one hundred and eiglhty dollars each; temporary labor, not to exceed four hundred dollars; in all, e' ht thousand six hundred and twenty dollars; lglfor maintenance, including purchase and care of horse, wagon, E‘P°"°°’· · and harness, fourteen thousand dollars; For repairs and improvements to buildings and grounds, one thousand five hundred dollars; In all for the Industrial Home School, twenty-four thousand one hundred and twengy dollars; . » For the care an maintenance of children under a contract to be w{‘°*;§}{’c{_‘§d*}e°j*,f**“°° made with the National Association for the Relief of Destitute Colored Women and Children by the Board of Charities, not to · exceed nine thousand nine hundred dollars. For the care and maintenance of children under a contract to be m{"°“¤°“¤¤’ H°¤P*· made with the Washin ton Home for Foundlings by the Board of ` Charities, six thousand dollars. For the care and maintenance of children under a contract to be S¤*¤**¤¤’•—*¤¥l¤¤¤· made with Saint Ann’s Infant Asylum by the Board of Charities, six thousand dollars. TEMPORARY HOMES. Temporary homes. Municipal lodging house and wood and stone yard, namely: Su[per— h,fg*e¤*°*P**' '°dS*¤8 intendent, one thousand two hundred dollars; cook, three hun red ` and sixty dollars; foreman, three hundred and sixty dollars; night watchman for sh: months, at twenty-five dollars per month, one hundred and fifty dollars; maintenance, one thousand eight hundred ping twenty dollars; in all, three thousand eight hundred and ninety o ars. The Commissioners of the District of Columbia are authorized to Nizht Lodsins acceg, as a donation from the Night Lodging House Association of H°°°° °°°°°°°d’ the rstrict of Columbia, the south half of lot nineteen, in s uare two hundred and ninety-three, in the city of Washington, and the improvements thereon, now known as the Night Lodging House, the same to become the propert of the District of Columbia. Temporary Home for ex-lilnion Soldiers and Sailoré, Grand Army m§,;§‘}§0,,:,""Y “°l‘ of the Republic, namely: Superintendent, one thousand two hun- ` dred dollars; janitor, three hundred and sixty dollars; cook, three