Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 26.djvu/578

 524_ FIFTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 1126. 1890:- mmm mms. INDIAN AFFAIRS. Uw ¤¤¤¤¤¤i=¤i¤¤- Urn COMMISSION: For this amount, or so much thereof as may berequired to pay indebtedness incurred by the Commission to negotiate with the Southern Ute Indians for the relinquishment of theirlands in Colorado, one thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary. n. c. Hobbs. RELIEF OF B. C. HOBBS: To re·imburse B. C. Hobbs, amount ex·— R°'”*"“”°'”°”°- pended by him in the purchase for the United States, b and withi ' the approval of the Commissioner of Indian Aifairs, of a lot of land: for a training school for the Eastern Cherokee Indians at Cherokee,. North Carolina, one hundred and twenty-two dollars and fifty cents,. A. M. Wilson. RELIEF OF A. M. WILSON : The Secretary of the Interior is hereby ` P°"¤°”' “’· authorized to lpay, out of the appropriation of twenty-five thousandi • dollars made y section fourteen of the Indian appro riation act for- l the fiscal year eighteen hundred and ninety, to A.  Wilson, thesum of one hundred and twenty-seven dollars and eighty cents, om account of per diem, traveling, and other necessary ex enses incurred by him under an order of the Department to visit gNashing— ton in April, eighteen hundred and eighty-nine, to confer with the- Secretary of the _Interior in relation to his duties as a commissionerto negotiatewith the `Cherokee Indians. llbcalhnenus. MISCELLANEOUS, INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. Supreme com re For amount due the reporter of the decisions of the Supreme- W"' Court for six hundred an eighty-four volumes of Supreme Court reports delivered to the Secretary of the Interior under the provis- V0l.%,p.66l. ions of section two of act of February twelfth, eighteen hundred and eight -nine, relating to the distribution of the Reports of the- Supreme Court of the nited States, one thousand three hundred: an sixty-eight dollars. - mgmpemes nepm, _ POST-OFFICE DEPARTMENT. = contingent ex- CoN·r1NoENT Ex1=·ENsEs: To supply)a deficiency in the a propria- ’°°°°“‘ tion for telegraphing, Post Office epartment, one hundred andi forty-three dollars and ninety-two cents. For miscellaneous items, two hundred dollars. For twenty temporary clerks for five months’ services, at sixty dollars per month each, to enable the Postma ter-General to tabulate the returns from all post-offices of a general count of the several clalsses ofbmaill msgter for on3veek.ls2x thousandldollars.1 d A¤¤*¤¤¤¤¤ r¤=¤— o cna e the ostmaster- enera o pay o the em oyees an ES'? mn mm °f late employees of the Post-Office Department additional) compensa-» tion for services rendered by such employees as were embraced in orders of the Postmaster—General, dated April eleventh and June eighteenth. eighteen hundred and eighty-five, requiringfxtra hoursof labor, said additional compensation to be regulated y the extra time said em loyees were actually engaged in rendering service under said ordhrs, twelve thousand seven hundred and sixty-six dollars and eighty cents. P°*"“‘ ""*°°· our OF THE POSTAL REvENuEs. F<>¤=ic¤¤¤¤¤¤ FOREIGN MAILS: Balance due foreign countries, being for the service of the fiscal year eighteen hundred and eighty-nine, forty two thousand dollars. r¤¤¤¤mm· sc- For amount to re-imburse the postal revenues, being the amount. °°"'"“‘ retained by postmasters in excess of the appropriation, eighteen. hundred and eighty-nine, three hundred am ninety-two thousand