Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 7.djvu/443

 TREATY WITH THE CHIPPEWAS, ETC. 1833. 433 States they shall be capable of managing so large a fund with safety they may withdraw the whole or any part of it.] Four hundred dollars a year to be paid to Billy Caldwell, and three Annu;,,,,, hundred dollars a year, to be paid to Alexander Robinson, for life, in l addition to the annuities already granted them--Two hundred dollars a year to be paid to Joseph Lafromboise and two hundred dollars a year to be paid to Shabehnay, for life. Two thousand dollars to be paid to Wau-pon-eh-see and his band, Payments for and lifteen hundred dollars to Awn-kote aud his band, as the considera- "°”°¤¤ °fl=*¤d· tion for nine sections of land, granted to them by the 3d Article of the Treaty of Prairie du Chien of the 29th of July 1829 which are hereby Ante, p. 321. assigned and surrendered to the United States. Awrrcuz 4th-A just proportion of the annuity money, secured as Where annuiwell by former treaties as the present, shall be paid west of the Missis- 6*9 ¤h¤U iw sippi to such portion of the nation as shall have removed thither during pwd" the ensuing three years.-After which time, the whole amount of the annuities shall be paid at their location west of the Mississippi. A1z·r1cLn 5th.—The Reservation of two sections of land to Shab-eh- Certain reser. nay by the 2d. Clause of the 3d. Article of the treaty of Prairie du Y°*i°¤¤_€¥¤¤¤¢d Chien of the 29th July, 1829, shall be a grant in fee simple to him his l“A*,‘ff’Bs;,m§Q‘§‘ heirs and assigns forever, and all the individual reservations of land in i i i the treaty concluded at Camp Tippecanoe, dated 20th October 1832, Ante, p. 312. shall be considered as grants in fee simple to the persons to whom they are made, their heirs and assigns forever, and that the reservations in the said last mentioned treaty of one section of land, to be located at Twelve Mile Grove, or Na-be-na-qui-nong-——" for Joseph Laughton, son of Waiske shaw," and of two sections of land to include the small grove of timber on the river above Rock Village " for the children of Waiske shaw" shall be considered as grants in fee simple to their father David Laughton, his heirs and asssigns forever :-that the reservation in said treaty of one sectibn of land to be located at Soldiers’ village for Mawte—no, daughter of Francis Burbonnais jun’r,shall be considered as a grant in fee simple to her father the said Francis Burbonnois junr. his heirs and assigns forever: and that the reservation in said Treaty of one section of land to be located at Skunk Grove for the children of Joseph La Fromboise shall be considered as a grant in fee simple to the said Joseph La F ramboise his heirs and assigns forever.—Provided that no sale of any of the said reservations shall be valid unless approved by the President of the United States. The 5th Article has been inserted at the request of the said Chiefs Treaty not to who alledge that the provisions therein contained were agreed to at the g$€VlfgQ§g°:Y°,. time of the making of the said treaties but were omitted to be inserted me mj, micj,,_ or erroneously put down.-—It is however distinctly understood that Ithe rejection of said Article by the President and Senate of the United States shall not vitiate this treaty. This treaty after the same shall have been ratified by the President Treaty binding and Senate of the United States, shall be binding on the contracting Whm *‘¤“6°d· parties. In testimony whereof the said George B. Porter, Thomas J. V. Owen and William Weatherford, and the undersigned Chiefs and Headmen of the said nation of Indians, have hereunto set their hands at Chicago, the said day and year. G. B. PORTER, TH. J. V. OWEN, WILLIAIVI WEATHERFORD. 55 2 M