Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 41 Part 1.djvu/1145

 SIXTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. III. C11. 70. 1921. 1125 For purchase and repair- of fiuniture, tools, machinery, material, irasusna-mas; sxand books, and apparatus to be used in connection with instruction °°“’°"‘ in manual training, and incidental expenses connected therewith, $45,000. For fuel, gas, and electric light and power, $165,000. p°§,g,°'· **8**% ud For furniture, including clocks, pianos, and window shades for F¤r¤}i¤¤r¤,r¤r addiadditions to buildings, equipment for kindergartens, and tools and “°”" fumishin for manual—training, cooking, and sewinv schools, as follows: §ight—room addition to the Petworth School, e' ht-room sprained twang. addition to the Deanwood School, e` ht-room addition to line Burrville School, eig'ht·room addition at Eighteenth and Monroe Streets, Northwest, eig t·room addition to the West School, eight~room addition to the Takoma School, and equi ent of the Phelps School, $38,460, to be immediately available; thxe kindergartens, $2,400; two sewing schools, $800; one housekeeping and cooking school, $1,000; one cooking school, $700; two manuartraining shops, $1,640; in al], $45,000. For contingent expenses, including furniture and repairs of same, ccntincanzerpanu. stationery, printing, ice, purchase and repair of equipment for highschool cadets, and other necessary items not otherwise provided or, including an allowance of not exceeding $300 per annum for livery of horse or not exceeding $360 per annum for garage for each the superintendent of schools,·the superintendent of janitors, the two assistant superintendents, the director of primary instruction, the school cabinetmaker, the supervising principal ID charge of the white special schools, the chief medrca and sanitary ins ctor of schools, and the supervising principal of the colored specialxhchools, and including not exceeding $3,000 or books of reference and periodicals, $75,000. For the purchase of sanitary paper towels and for fixtures for dis- Pape: towers. pensing the same  the pupils, $3,000. For purchase of pianos or school building? and ldndergarten schools, raw. at an average cost not to exceed $300 eac, $1,500. For textbooks and school supplies for use of upils of the first Supplies to pupils. eight grades, who at the time are not sulpplied wigi the same, to be distributed by the superintendent of pub ic schools under regulations to be made by the board of education, and for the necessa expenses of purchase, distribution, and preservation of said texlhooks and supplies, includirgginecessary labor not to exceed $1,000, one bookkeeper and oust an of textbooks and supplies at $1,200 and one assistant at $800, $100,000: Provided, That the board of education, f,’#¤¤*•¤- in its discretion, is authorized to make exchanges of such books and x°h°°‘°°' other educational publications now on hand as may not be desirable for use. For purchase of United States flags, $900. ;}°€’· ms For maintenance and repair o seventy-two playgrounds now °”'°° ' established, $3,000. _ For equipment, {grading, and improving six additional school yards S°"°°"'°"“· for the purposes 0 play of pupils, $2,400. School md as For utensils, material, an labor, for establishment and main- g ° ' tenance of school gardens, $3,000. Pa m mmf The board of education is authorized to deskrnate the months in study? em., rama: which the ten salary payments now required byllaw shall be made to "°“· teachprs ajsigned to the work of instruction in nature study and schoo ar ens. . S Q For gurchase of apparatus and technical books and extending the suiiiiliig d pmmm equipment and for maintenance of the hysics departments in the Business, Central, Eastern, Western, gunior, and Dunbar High Schools, $3,000.