Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 28.djvu/319

 290 FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 290. 1894. erection of houses for Indians, for the purchase of agricultural implements, stock, and seeds, breaking and fencing land; for payment of expenses of delegationsof Chippewa Indians to visit the White Earth Reservation; for the erection and maintenance of day and industrial schools; for subsistence and for pay of employees, for pay of commisn¤m¤vn,m. sioners and their expenses; and for removal of Indians and for their allotments, to be reimbursed to the United States out of the proceeds of sale of their lands, fifty thousand dollars; _ $*1****5**- For completing the necessary surveys within the Chippewa Indian Reservation, in `Minnesota, including expenses ot examining and appraising pine lands, under the provisions of the said Act, to be reunbursed to the United States out of the proceeds of the sale of their lands, twentyfive thousand dollars; in all, one hundred and sixty-five thousand dollars. ` Clhjlptpewas of Fond CHIPPEWAS OF FOND DU LAC. du. _Iimb¤r <1¤1>r¤<i¤- This amount to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of “°"" the Interior, for the benefit of the Fond du Lac Indians of the State of Minnesota, being the sum recovered by the United States in com- ` promise of suits against certain parties for timber depredations upon the Fond du Lac Reservation in Minnesota, and which sum has been deposited in the United States Treasury as a miscellaneous receipt, . four thousand three hundred dollars. 1 m,.,,,t,,w,_ CHOCTAWS. pemmm lama. For permanent annuity, per second article of treaty of November tig), ,, pm, sixteenth, eighteen hundred and five, and thirteenth article of treaty v»£1i,p.¤i4. of June twenty-second, eighteen hundred and fifty-five, three thousand dollarsvox 7, ». 213. For permanent annuity for support of light horsemen, per thirteenth article of treaty of October eighteenth, eighteen hundred and twenty, VOI.11,p.614. and thirteenth article of treaty of June twenty-second, eighteen hundred and fiftyhve, six hundred dollars; · wr 1, p. 212. For permanent annuity, for support of blacksmith, per sixth article vcr v,p.2as. of treaty of October eighteenth, eighteen hundred and twenty, ninth article of treaty of January twentieth, eighteen hundred and twenty- <’¤1.¤.p·614- five, and thirteenth article of treaty of June twenty-second, eighteen hundred and fifty-tive, six hundred dollars; - ‘ For permanent annuity for education, per second and thirteenth articles of last two treaties named above, six thousand dollars; Vol.7,p.238. For permanent annuity for iron and steel, per ninth article of treaty V°*· “· P- **1* of January twentieth, eighteen hundred and twenty-tive, and thirteenth article of treaty of June twentysecond, eighteen hundred and fifty· five, three hundred and twenty dollars; mmm. For interest on three hundred and ninety thousand two hundred and fifty-seven dollars and ninety-two cents, at five per centum per annum, tor education, support of the government, and other beneficial purposes, under the direction of the general council of the Choctaws, in con- V(,,_,_,,_23,,_ formity with the provisions contained in the ninth and thirteenth articles of treaty of January twentieth, eighteen hundred and twentyhve, v01.n.p.si4. and treaty of June twenty-second, eighteen hundred and fifty-five, nineteen thousand five hundred and twelve dollars and eighty-nine cents; in all, thirty thousand and thirty-two dollars and eighty-nine cents. Coeurdelenes. C(EUR D7ALENES. For third of fifteen installments of eight thousand dollars each, to be expended under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, under W1 26»r·1<>"·8· the sixth article of agreement of March twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and eighty-seven, ratified by Act of March third, eighteen hundred and ninety-one, eight thousand dollars;