Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 21.djvu/186

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156 FORTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 121. 1880. of pavements on streets named in appendix P numbered ten and eleven, annexed to the Report of the Commissioners of the District for eighteen hundred and seveniynine (being schedules of streets requiring imme- Materials. diate attention), three hundred thousand dollars; for materials for permit work, twenty thousand dollars; for work on canal to deepwater on river iront, eighteen thousand six hundred dollars; for repairing and macadamizing Seventh street road, fifteen thousand dollars; for sur- S¤1‘v<>y¤- veys of the District of Columbia with reference to the future extension of various avenues to the District line, five thousand dollars; in all, five hundred a11d seventy-six thousand six hundred dollars. FOR CONSTRUCTIN G, REPAIRING, AND MADTTAINING BRIDGES. Bridges. For ordinary care of Benning’s Anacostia, and Chain bridges, one thousand five hundred dollars; for replanking and painting Anacostia bridge, tour thousand dollars; for repairs to M street bridge, six thousand dollars; in all, eleven thousand five hundred dollars. FOR MAINTAINING INSTITUTIONS OF CHARITY, REFORM- ATORIES, AND PRISONS. W a shi M il ton For Washington Asylum: For one commissioner and intendant, one A“l’]'“"· thousand dollars; one matron, six hundred dollars; one visiting physician, one thousand two hundred dollars; one resident physician, tour hundred and eighty dollars · one overseer, eight hundred dollars; one clerk, four hundred and eighty dollars; one baker, t'our hundred and twenty dollars ; five overseers, at six hundred dollars each ; one watchman, three hundred dollars; three watehinen, at one hundred and eighty dollars each; one driver, one hundred and twenty dollars; one hostlcr, sixty dollars; one cook, one hundred and twenty dollars; two cooks, at sixty dollars each; five nurses, at sixty dollars each ; and ior contingent expenses, including repairs, provisions, fuel, torage, lumber, shoes, clothing, hardware, dry-goods, medicines, and miscellaneous items, twenty-eight thousand five hundred dollars; in all, thirty-eight thousand and torty dollars. Worklioiisu. For the completion of the south wing of the new workhouse at the Washington Asylum, and improvement of the grounds about it, ten thousand dollars. ti oorgetow 11 For the Georgetown Almshouso: Support of inmates, one thousand M"'“""""‘· eiglit hundred dollars. _'1‘»-¤m»poi·tiition For transportation of paupers and conveying prisoners to the work- M l>=¤"l*·>¤'¤· house, three thousand five hundred dollars. Insane o 4* in e For support of the indigent insane of the District of Columbia in the Di;·'¤`:‘*·4H4_; 48 A Government Hospital for the Insane in said District, as provided in 485%* r ‘* 4 ¤ sections fortyeight hundred and forty-three, fortyeight hundred and — iorty-four, and torty-eight hundred and fifty of the Revised Statutes, thirty-seven thousand dollars. And hereafter the Superintendent of the Government Hospital for the Insane shall make a report to (longress annually at the beginning of each regular session, which shall show in detail the receipts and expenditures for all purposes connected with the hospital for the ilscal year preceding such session. Reform School. For Reform School: For salaries, fuel, and incidentals and repairs, and payment by the District of Columbia for support of the boys sent 187G,`ch. 90, to the school, under act of May third, eighteen hundred and seventy- }§_S§=w-,49- six, twenty five thousand dollars: Provided, That one of the Commis ""’”°· sioners of the District of Columbia, to be selected by the Board of Com- 'I`¤¤¤'>¤¤¤· missioners, shall be a trustee, with all the powers, privileges, and duties of other trustees of said Reform School. The trustees of said Reform School are authorized to use of the money due them from the trustees of Jay Cooke and Company the sum of eight thousand five hundred dollars, or so much as may be necessary, to purchase the remainder of