Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/935

This page needs to be proofread.

906 FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 188. 1895. for pay of superintendent of said school, one thousand five hundred dollars; for general repairs and improvements, one thousand dollars; in all, twenty-seven thousand five hundred and fifty dollars. _ 1’*P••*°¤°- mm For support and education of seventy-five Indian pupils at the Indian school, Pipestone, Minnesota, at one hundred and sixty-seven dollars per annum each, twelve thousand five hundred and twenty-five dollars; for pay of superintendent at said school, one thousand two hundred dollars- for general repairs and improvements, five hundred dollars; in all, fourteen thousand two hundred and twenty-five dollars. S•lem, oreg. For upport and education of two hundred and fifty Indian pupils at the Indian school, Salem, Oregon, at one hundred and sixty-seven dollars per annum each, forty-one thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars; f6r pay of superintendent at said school, one thousand live hundred dollars; for general repairs and improvements, one thousand dollars; in all, forty-four thousand two hundred and fifty dollars. S"“*‘F°»N·M°‘· For support and education of one hundred and fifty Indian pupils · at the Indian school at Santa Fe, New Mexico, at one hundred and sixty-seven dollars each per annum, twenty-five thousand and fifty dollars; for pay of superintendent at said school, one thousand five hundred dollars; for water supply for irrigation and fire protection, one thousand five hundred dollars; for general repairs and improvements, one thousand dollars; in all, twenty-nine thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars. m• B°'—""· For support and education of one hundred and fifty Indian pupils Y at the Indian school, Shoshone Reservation, Wyoming, at one hundred and sixty-sezen dollars per annum oach,.twenty-five thousand and fifty dollars;' for pay of superintendent at said school, one thousand five hundred dollars; for general repairs and improvements, one thousanld dollars; in all, twenty-seven thousand five hundred and · dollars. T¤¤¤·¤¤·W`¤¤· tmipr support and educationof one hundred Indian pupils atthe Indian school, Tomah, Wisconsin, at one hundred and sixty-seven dollars per annumeach, sixteen thousand seven hundred dollars; for pay of superintendent at said school, one thousand two hundred dollars; for general repairs and improvements, one thousand dollars; in all, eighteen thousand nine hundred dollars. Girln ¤¤¤U&v;.¤>l•¤ That the Commissioner of Indian Affairs shall employ Indian girls '"'°° ” “'"" °as assistant matrons and Indian boys as farmers and industrial teachers in all Indian schools when it is practicable to do so. ·rm¤p¤mu¤¤.¤s¤. For collecting and transportation of pupils to and from Indian schools, and also for the transportation of Indian pupils from all the Indian schools and placing of them, with the consent of their parents, under the care and control of such suitable white families as may in all respects be qualified to give such pupils moral, industrial, and educational training, under arrangements in which their proper care, support, and education shall bein exchange for their labor, thirty thousand dollars, of which amount the sum of eight thousand dollars shall be immediately available. b¤.<;jL¤;¤¤h·gdr:;‘:¤;; That hereafter no Indian child shall be sent from any Indian reser- Sm,_,,.,f vation to a school beyond the State or Territory in which said reservation is situated without the voluntary consent of the father or mother of such child if either of them are living, and if neither of them are living without the voluntary consent of the next of kin of such child. Such consent shall be made before the agent of the reservation, and he shall send to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs his certificate that such consent has been voluntarily given before such child shall be removed from such reservation. And it shall be unlawful for any Indian agent or other employee of the Government to induce, or seek to induce, by withholding rations or by other improper means. the parents or next of kin of any Indian to consent to the removal of any Indian child beyond the limits of any reservation.