Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 34 Part 1.djvu/1080

 1050 F IFTY-NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. II. Ch. 2285. 1907. virginia, VIRGINIA. Hampton school. For the support and education of one hundred and twenty Indian pupils at the school at Hampton, Virginia, twenty thousand and forty ollars. g‘éQgll° A¥°”“Y- For pay_of Indian agent at the Colville Agency, Vlrashington, one thousand hve hundred dollars; d,g_‘_QV°m*’h· "*°·» 1* For support and civilization of the D’VVamish and other allied tribes sui{p¤n,em. in Washington, including pay of employees, seven thousand dollars; ug`,;"°“¥’ R°"’""‘ For rebuilding and re airing the sawmill on the Tulalip Indian Sawmill. Reservation, two thousandp dollars., ${1**;*0fj; em For support and civilization of the Makahs, Washington, including _ · pay of employees, two thousand dollars; _ _ _ Q3i';;j]*};g;*S ““" or support and civilization of the Qui-nai-elts and Quil-leh-utes, Support, etc. including pay of employees, one thousand dollars; gg·:§;*:*;j(f°· For support and civilization of Yakimas, and other Indians at said 'agency, including pay of employees, five thousand dollars; T°l°Ph°¤°· For the construction of a telephone line on the Yakima Reservation, four thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary; I°°*d°”**lS· For general incidental expenses of the Indian Service in Wasliington, including traveling ex nses of agents, and su port and civilization of Indians at Colville andpI’uyallup agencies, and) for pa_y of employees, thirteen thousand dollars. g:§,°’§§·W_t of Im That the Secretary of the Interior, in his discretion,is hereby authordian cemetery, ew. ized, with the consent of the Indians, to be obtained in such manner as , he may deem best, to sell, under rulesand regulationsto be prescribed by him, any tract or part of any tracts of land heretofore set apart and reserved for cemetery and church purposes in the Indian addition to the city of Tacoma, \Vashington, not now needed for these purposes, and to use the proceeds of said sale for fencing and otherwise improving the part or parts now used, occupied, or needed for the cemetery and the church. spokases. sroiunns. (Treaty.) Bm°fS°mh’°°°' For pay of a blacksmith and`carpenter to do necessary work and to vm 27 m instruct the said Indians in those trades, one thousand dollars each, ` ’p`per sixth article of agreement with said Indians, dated March eighteenth, eighteen hundred and eighty-seven, ratified by Act of Congress ' approved July thirteenth, eighteen hundred and ninety-two, two thou- _ sand dollars; ,,QmPh’“ B“"d· Mz For purchase of agricultural implements, and support and civilization of Joseph’s Band of Nez Perce Indians, one thousand dollars; ' Ynkimas- For the extension of the irrigation system on lands allotted to mmi¤¤¤¤s ¤ll·>t· Yakima Indians in Wrashington, fifteen thousand dollars, to be reim- P S. . . . vm, aa, p. suv. bursed from the proceeds ot the sale of surplus lands, as provided by the Act of December twenty-first. nineteen hundred and four, entitled "An Act to authorize the sale and disposition of surplus or unallotted lands of the Yakima Indian Reservation in the State of lVashington;" in fill, fifteen thousand dollars. €·>lri¤·> R¢S¢¤’V¤¤i<>¤· n art ayment to the Indians residin on the Colville Reservation digg; °°ym°°° m m for the cesgion by said Indians to the Undead States of one million five hundred thousand acres of land opened to settlement by an Act of V<>1- 27, r-61 Congress "To provide for the opening of a part of the Colville Reservation in the State of Washington, and for other purposes," approved July first, eighteen hundred and ninety-two, being a art of the full sum set aside and held in the Treasury of the United) States in pavame, p. 2.:1. ment for said land under the terms of the Act approved June twenty- Erst, nineteen hundred and six, ratifying the agreement ceding said