Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 20.djvu/90

 FORTY-FIFTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 142. 1878. 65 At the Cheyenne and Arapaho agency, at two thousand two hundred Ag6,m,,,,Om;,,m,d_ dollars; At the Wichita agency, at one thousand two hundred dollars; At the White Earth agency, at one thousand six hundred dollars; At the Sac and Fox agency, Iowa, at one thousand dollars; At the Green Bay agency, at one thousand five hundred dollars; At the La Pointe agency, at two thousand dollars; At the Mackinac agency, at one thousand two hundred dollars; At the New York agency, at one thousand two hundred dollars; At the Papago agency, at one thousand eight hundred dollars; At the Colorado River agency, at one thousand five hundred dollars; At the Pima and Maricopa agency, at one thousand eight hundred dollars; At the San Carlos agency, at two thousand dollars; At the Moquis Pueblo agency, at one thousand three hundred dollars; At the Gros Ventres agency, at one thousand dollars ; At the Red Lake agency, at one thousand five hundred dollars; At the Leech Lake agency, at one thousand five hundred dollars; At the Tulalip agency, at one thousand five hundred dollars; At the Quinaielt agency, at one thousand dollars; 187s,eh.1s>1, At the Mission agency, at three thousand dollars; in all, one hundred 1’°8’» 119- and three thousand eight hundred dollars: Provided, That in the case Cwgvvlidaiiwr of of the consolidation of two or more agencies, the sums appropriated for “9°"°'“· the salaries of agents at said agencies, or so much thereof as may be necessary, may be used, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior, to increase the salary of the agent who shall remain or be placed in charge of the consolidated agency: Provided further, That in no case IM’*‘¤¢{8¢_ of W- shall such salary exceed the sum of two thousand two hundred dollars ‘"`y‘ I’"""‘ per annum. The Union agency in the Indian Territory is hereby abolished, and the UWM 4 90**6:4 duties heretofore devolving upon said agency are transferred to the “b°l“"“d‘ office of the Commissioner of Indian Atfairs. For pay of seventy-eight interpreters, as follows, namely: I¤1¢<>¤p¤>*6¤‘¤· Seven for the tribes in Oregon, namely, two for the Klamath, and one each for Grand Ronde, Siletz, Umatilla, Warm Springs, and Malheur agencies, at three hundred dollars per annum each, two thousand one hundred dollars; Six ior the tribes in Washington Territory, to be assigned to such agencies as the Secretary of the Interior may direct, at three hundred dollars per annum each, one thousand eight hundred dollars; Two for the tribes in Idaho, namely, at Nez Perces and Fort Hall agencies, at three hundred dollars per annum each, six hundred dollars; Three for the tribes in Nevada, namely, for Pi·Ute, \Valker River, and Pyramid Lake reservations, at three hundred dollars per annum each, nine hundred dollars; One additional for Nevada, namely, Western Shoshone agency, three hundred dollars; Five for the tribes in Montana, namely, one each at Flathead, Blackfeet, and Crow, and two at Fort Peck agencies, at three hundred dollars per annum each one thousand five hundred dollars; One additional for the Gros Ventres in Montana, three hundred dollars; Eleven for the tribes in Dakota, namely, two at Fort Berthold, and one each at Yankton, Crow Creek, Standing Rock, Cheyenne River, Sisseton, Devil’s Lake, Red Cloud, Spotted Tail, and Lower Brule agencies, at three hundred dollars per annum each, three thousand three hundred dollars: One for the tribes in Wyoming, at the Shoshone agency, three hundred dollars; One for the tribes in Utah, three hundred dollars; Five for the tribes in New Mexico, namely, two for the Navajo, and one each for the Mescalero Apache, Pueblo, and Abiquiu agencies, at xx--5