Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 35 Part 1.djvu/107

 SIXTIETH CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 153. 1908. 89 For purchase of iron and steel and other necessaries for the shops, {,*3}-1j“°‘·,g},°· as per ourth article of treat of Se tember twenty-fourth, eighteen'p` ' hundred and fifty-seven, five hundred) dollars; In all, forty-seven thousand one hundred dollars. QUAPAWS. (rnmrr.) Q“¤P¤W¤· For education, r third article of treat of Ma thirteenth eight- E"“°*“°"- een hundred and tlliirty-three, one thousand dollars};, g VOL 7' p` m' For blacksmith and assistants, and tools, iron, and steel for black- “'“°"'“‘“*'·°‘°- smith shop, per same article and treat , Eve hundred dollars; In all, one thousand five hundred dollars: Bwided, That the Presi- §;",$'gM 0, PML dent of the United States shall certify the same to be for the best dwinterests of the Indians. » secs ann Foxes or me mssrssirrr. . (rumen.) m§°§;‘,;,}§,m§j*°° °’ For permanent annuity, in goods or otherwise, r third article of *“¤“**Y- my of November third, sig teen hundred and fdur, one thousand Y°1`7'p`85` o rs; For interest on two hundred thousand dollars, at five per centum, {,’$°’f'{; M per second article of treaty of Oetobertwenty-lirst, eighteen hundred' ' and thirty-seven, ten thousand dollars; For interest on eight hundred thousand dollars, at live per centum,. per second article of treaty of October eleventh, eighteen hundred and fort —two forty thousand dollars: Provided, That the sum of one f,‘{_°y';{°dkn M thousand, five hundred dollars of this amount shall be used forthe pay ' of a ph sician and for purchase of medicine; _In all: fiftyo-pus thousand dollars. ‘ That the retary of the Interior is hereby authorized, in his dis- *`°'°¤P**°P¤Y¤°¤*· cretion, to pay per capita to the Sac and Fox of the Mississippi tribe of Indians in the State of Oklahoma, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars, out of the trust fund now to their credit in the United States Treasury, under such rules and regulations as he may lprescribe: B·0oided, That said payment shall only be made upon app ication of Qgvuigiou a majority of the members of said tribes expressed in open council: ` Provided further, That the Secretary of the Interior is authorized, in §g_*;*e:$*{g°°*· his discretion, to pay, upon the surrender of the note hereinafter ` described, out of the above sum a propriated for the Sac and Fox Indians to Helen Pennock, the widbw and surviving heir of William Pennock, the sum of six hundred dollars, in full sett ement of a promissorly note (given by Mo-ko-ho-ko and Ke-wa·quah, chiefs of the Sac and `ox In ians, and Ketch-e-Cush, a councilman. That there be, and hereby is, appropriated, out of any money in the ,n§;{}$*¤ K*°k*P°° Treasury not otherwise a pro rrated, the sum of two hundred and serrneimnr or irn fifteen thousand dollars, fhr tile fulfillment of certain treaty obliga· H§}E§s°,2g,_"‘“ "'° tions to the Mexican Kickapoo Indians for dilferences arising out of V°'- *3- P- °“- the stipulations of article four of the treaty of June twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, and for all other differences growing out of any and all treaties and agreements heretofore made between said Indians and the United States. Said sum of two hundred and P""”‘°““· fifteen thousand dollars shall be paid by the Secretary of the Treasury as authorized and directed by a majority of the members of said Mexican Kickapoo tribe in council assembled. Such council shall be composed of a majority of those surviviplg members of said tribe, male and emale, heretofore allotted in Okl oma. The authorization above mentioned and the proceedings of said council shall be attested by a clerk of the United States district court of the Territory of Arizona. Said sum shall be immediately available and the indorsement of the warrant imued in ayment thereof shall be deemed and shall be a receipt in full for ad claims of every kind whatsoever of the said Mex-