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32D CONG.....2D Sess.

For compensation of sixteen laborers employed in the publie grounds and President's garden, at the rate of forty dollars per month each... To supply a deficiency for the purchase of trees and the hire of laborers on the improvements of reservation number two, or public mall, between Seventh and Twelfth streets west... For compensation of the keeper of the western gate of the Capitol square... For compensation of two day watchmen, employed in the Capitol square, at five hundred dollars each

For compensation of the doorkeeper at the President's House, at five hundred dollars, and of assistant doorkeeper at the same, at three hundred and sixty five dollars per annum.... For compensation of two night watchmen at the President's House..... For a bridge across the Potomac at Little Falls, to be expended under the direction of the President of the United States... For the purpose of bringing water into the city of Washington, upon such plans and from such places as the President of the United States may approve....

For compensation of two draw-keepers and a watchman at the Potomac Bridge, and for fuel and oil for lamps... For repairing the Long Bridge across the Potomac river... For compensation of two draw-keepers at the two bridges across the Eastern Branch of the Potomac, and for fuel and oil for lamps..... For compensation of the Auxiliary Guard, and for fuel and oil for lamps.... For the support, care, and medical treatment, in the Washington Infirmary, of twelve transient paupers, medical and surgical patients.... For the purchase of manure for the public grounds...........................

7,680 00

5,276 52 730 01

1,000 00

865 00 1,000 00

30,000 00

Appropriations.

For annuities and grants..

750 00 20,000 00

For expenses of loans and treasury notes.. For pensions to widows and orphans under the act entitled "An act to continue half-pay to certain widows and orphans," approved February third, eighteen hundred and fifty three..174,000 00 For the discharge of such miscellaneous claims, not otherwise provided for, as shall be admitted in due course of settlement at the Treasury... 5,000 00 To enable the Clerk of the House of Representatives to furnish, pay for, and deliver the same books to the delegates from Oregon, New Mexico, and Utah, for the Thirty-Second Congress, as per resolution of said House, passed twen

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ty-sixth July, eighteen hundred and fifty two.. 2,700 00 By the act making appropriations for the support

To pay to J.T. Mudd for services in the office of Commissioner of Public Buildings, from the day of the death of the late Commissioner to the appointment of the present incumbent.... For compensation of the warden, clerk, physician, chaplain, two assistant keepers, four guards, and porter of the penitentiary of the District of Columbia...

For compensation of three inspectors of said penitentiary.......

65 00

For the support, clothing, and medical treatment of insane paupers of the District of Columbia, at such places as the Secretary of the Interior may, in his discretion, deem proper.......... 10,000 00 For the purchase of two hundred and fifty copies of the Statutes at Large of the United States, and of the Synoptical Index thereto, at the contract price paid by Congress, to be distributed under the direction of the Department of State, among the several consulates and commercial agents.......

...100,000 00

1,800 00 20,000 00

For the support and maintenance of said penitentiary.....

7,350 00 300 00 1,240 00

1,000 00 16,400 00

2,000 00

8,750 00

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For the purchase of trees and tree boxes to replace, when necessary, such as have been planted by the United States, and for repairs of pavements in front of the public grounds...... 2,300 00 For annual repairs of the Capitol, water-closets, public stables, water pipes, pavements, and other walks within and around the Capitol Square, painting the interior of all the committee rooms, cleaning out and paving the vaults under the crypt, extending gas-pipes through the vaults, cleaning and whitewashing the ceiling of the rotunda, replacing broken glass, locks, &c....

For annual repairs of the President's House, furniture, improvement of grounds, painting and repairing roof, cleaning, painting, and whitewashing inside of the house, extending east wing of offices for carriage-house, blinds for the west front of the house, flooring large room in basement, purchasing trees and plants for garden, and for making hot-beds therein, wire fence, &c...

For refurnishing the President's House, to be expended under the direction of the President, in addition to the proceeds of the sale of such of the furniture and equipage of the said house as may be decayed, out of repair, or unfit for

use...

For painting the exterior of the President's House below the cornice... For heating and ventilating the Executive Mansion, painting the exterior thereof, and painting the walls, ceilings, &c., of the rooms on the first floor, and making other improvements and repairs, and for the purchase of books for the President's library... For erecting lamp-posts and lamps on both sides of Pennsylvania Avenue, from Seventeenth street to Georgetown, and from the Capitol to the Navy Yard... For completing the grading and paving of the carriage way of Pennsylvania Avenue, from Seventeenth street to Rock Creek, and for setting the curb stone and paving the footway six feat wide on each side of said Avenue, in addition to the sum heretofore appropriated for that object........

For inclosing with an iron fence, and otherwise improving, the triangular space on the north side of Pennsylvania Avenue, opposite the market house, and between Seventh and Eighth streets... For a deficiency for surveying, leveling, and measuring the triangular square on the north side of Pennsylvania Avenue between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets.... For supplying a deficiency in the appropriation made March third, eighteen hundred and fortynine, for completing the room under the Senate post office..

For lighting the Capitol and President's House, the public grounds around them and around the executive offices, and Pennsylvania Ave

nue..........

6,800 00

For salaries of nine supervising and fifty local inspectors, appointed under the act approved August thirtieth, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-two, for the better protection of the lives of passengers by steamboats, with traveling and other expenses incurred by them..... 70,000 00 For paper required for the printing of Congress for the first session of the Thirty-Third Congress..

of the Army, for the year ending the thirtieth of June, one thousand eight hundred and fifty

four.

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Fort Pulaski, including barracks and quarters... 20,000 00 South Carolina.

Fort Sumpter, Charleston harbor............ ..110,000 00 Maryland.

Fort Carroll, Sollers's Point, Baltimore harbor. 50,000 00 Delaware.

Fort Delaware, Pea Patch Island, Delaware river........

Maine.

Fort Knox, Penobscot river....

Massachusetts.

Fort Warren, Boston harbor..

..150,000 00

55,000 00

For paper required for the printing of the Executive departments... For the printing of the Senate for the first session of the Thirty-Third Congress For the printing of the House of Representatives for the first session of the Thirty-Third Congress....

.104,064 00 10,300 00 37,463 00

45,000 00 Fort Winthrop, Governor's Island, Boston...... 29,573 00 For commutation of officers' subsistence........615,847 00 For commutation of forage for officers' horses...104,928 00 For payments in lieu of clothing for officers' servants........

....

For expenses of recruiting..

36,320 00 43,200 00

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For the printing of the Executive departments, including for paper and printing the annual estimates, and for paper, printing, binding the Biennial Register, and the annual report of the Secretary of the Treasury on commerce and navigation.....

22,289 04

6,250 00

For compensation to the Superintendent of the Public Printing and the two clerks and messenger in his office....

For blank books, advertising for proposals for paper, postage, &c.....

25,000 00 1,050 00

6,595 00 1,102 00 For compensation of the librarian of the Patent Office, to be paid out of the patent fund.... 1,200 00 For the purchase of books for the library of the Patent Office, to be paid out of the patent fund, 1,500 00 Mexican Boundary Commission.

29,500 00

For completing the survey of the Rio Grande, and for office work for one year... 83,512 00 For arrears due Major William H. Emory's party, 20,000 00 For expenses attending Lieutenant Whipple's party from the Gila........ For pay of Commissioner and Secretary, and for personal and traveling expenses of the Commissioner.....

6,000 00

9,500 00

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.100,000 00

To pay James B. Smallwood and Martin La Truite, boys attending upon the mail wagons of the Senate, being twenty per cent. in addition to their pay for the year ending the thirtieth of June, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-three......

292 00

To pay the clerks of the Departments of the Treasury, War, Navy, the Interior, and the Post Office, when distributed and arranged as required by the third section of this act according to its provisions.... .[Indefinite.] The Secretary of the Treasury to purchase at the current market price any of the outstanding stocks of the United States as he may think most advisable, from any surplus funds in the Treasury.. .................[Indefinite.] The President of the United States to compensate Clark Mills for the execution of the equestrian statue of Andrew Jackson, recently placed upon the public square in the city of Washing ton north of the Executive Mansion, and to make the same the property of the United States... To pay Daniel S. McCauley, the late Consul General at Alexandria, in Egypt, for office rent at the rate of four hundred dollars per annum, during the time he acted in that capacity....[Indefinite.] For salaries of Governor and Superintendent of Indian Affairs, three judges, attorney, and marshal of Washington Territory, from the time of their appointment to the end of the fiscal

20,000 00

10,000 00 .1,028,497 00

....352,143 56

For subsistence in kind.. For clothing for the Army, camp and garrison equipage, and horse equipments.... For the regular supplies of the Quartermaster's Department, consisting of fuel, forage in kind for the horses, mules, and oxen, of the Quartermaster's Department, at the several military posts and stations, and with the armies in the field; for the horses of the first and second regiments of dragoons, the companies of light arfillery, the regiment of mounted riflemen, and such companies of infantry as may be mounted, and also for the authorized number of officers' horses when serving in the field and at the outposts; of straw for soldiers' bedding; and of stationery, including company and other blank books for the army, certificates for discharged soldiers, blank forms for the Pay and Quartermaster's Departments, and for the printing of division and department orders, army regulations, and reports....... .....1,050,000 00 For the incidental expenses of the Quartermaster's Department, consisting of postage on letters and packets received and sent by officers of the army on public service; expenses of courts-martial and courts of inquiry, including the additional compensation to judges-advocate, recorders, members, and witnesses, while on that service, under the act of March sixteenth, eighteen hundred and two; extra pay to soldiers employed, under the direction of the Quartermaster's Department, in the erection of barracks, quarters, storehouses, and hospitals; the construction of roads and other constant labor, for periods of not less than ten days, under the act of March second, eighteen hundred and nineteen; expenses of expresses to and from the frontier posts and armies in the field; of escorts to payinasters, other disbursing officers, and trains, when military escorts cannot be furnished; expenses of the interment of non-commissioned officers and soldiers; authorized office furniture; hire of laborers in the Quartermaster's Department, including hire of interpreters, spies, and guides for the army; compensation of clerk to officers of the Quartermaster's Department; compensation of forage and wagon-masters, authorized by the act of July, eighteen hundred and thirty-eight; for the apprehension of deserters, and the expenses incident to their pursuit; the various expenditures required for the first and second regiments of dragoons, the companies of light artillery, the regiment of mounted riflemen, and such companies of infantry as may be mounted, including the purchase of traveling forges, blacksmith's and shoeing tools, horse and mule shoes, iron, hire and veterinary surgeons, and medicine for horses and mules.

..300,000 00

32D CONG.....2D SESS.

For constructing, repairing, and enlarging barracks, quarters, hospitals, storehouses, stables, wharves, and ways, at the several posts and army depôts; for temporary cantonments, and the authorized furniture for barrack rooms of non commissioned officers and soldiers; gunhouses for the protection of cannon, including the necessary tools and materials for the objects enumerated, and for rent of quarters and offices for officers, and barracks and hospitals for troops, where there are no publie buildings for their accommodation; for storehouses for the safe-keeping of military stores, and of grounds for summer cantonments and encampments......

.300,000 00 65,000 00 40,000 00

.120,000 00

For erecting barracks and quarters at the Republican fork of the Kansas river.......... For erecting barracks and quarters for a military post on Minnesota river........... For mileage or allowance made to officers for the transportation of themselves and baggage, when traveling on duty without troops.. For transportation of the army, including the baggage of the troops, when moving either by land or water; of clothing, camp, and garrison equipage, and horse equipments, from the depot at Philadelphia to the several posts and army depôts; of subsistence from the places of purchase, and from the places of delivery, under contract, to such places as the circumstances of the service may require it to be sent; of ordnance, ordnance stores, and small arms, from the founderies and armories to the arsenals, fortifications, frontier posts, and army depôts; freights, tolls, and ferriage; for the purchase and hire of horses, mules, oxen, wagons, carts, drays, ships, and other sea-going vessels and boats, for the transportation of supplies, and for garrison purposes; for drayage and cartage at the several posts; hire of teamsters, transportation of funds for the pay and other disbursing departments; the expense of sailing public transports on the various rivers, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Atlantic and Pacific; and for procuring water at such posts as from their situation require that it be brought from a distance..... For the purchase of horses required for the first and second regiments of dragoons, the companies of light artillery, the regiment of mounted riflemen, and such companies of infantry as may be mounted..

..1,500,000 00

.180,000 00 For the medical and hospital departments...... 52,000 00 For cannon, gun-carriages, and projectiles for sea-coast defense....... ..200,000 00 For ordnance, orduance stores, and supplies....100,000 00 For the current expense of the ordnance service, 100,000 00 For the manufacture of arms at the national armories...

.250,000 00

To make good damages at Harper's Ferry, caused by the flood of nineteenth and twentieth of April, eighteen hundred and fifty-two......... 20,000 00 For repairs and improvements and new machinery at Harper's Ferry.......... 43,500 00 For repairs and improvements and new machinery at Springfield Armory............... 46,094 00 For arsenals...... 41,071 00 For arrearages prior to July first, eighteen hundred and fifteen, payable through the office of the Third Auditor, under an act approved May first, eighteen hundred and twenty, in addition to an unexpended balance of seven thousand four hundred and twenty-six dollars remaining in the Treasury on the thirtieth of September, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-two..... 3,500 00 For arrearages of pay, subsistence and clothing due to Captain Richard McRae's company of Virginia volunteers, which served in the war with Great Britain in eighteen hundred and twelve and thirteen.... For bridges, and establishing communications between Fort Leavenworth and the Republican fork of the Kansas river.... For fuel and quarters for officers of the army serving on light-house duty, the payment of which is no longer made by the Quartermaster's Department.....

For fuel and quarters, and for mileage or transportation for officers and enlisted men of the army serving on the coast survey in cases no longer provided for by the Quartermaster's Department.....

10,334 31

11,725 00

4,053 87

10,000 00

For the discharge of claims for preventing and suppressing Indian hostilities in Florida....[Indefinite.] To extend the provisions of the first section of the act entitled "An act making appropriations for the support of the Army for the year ending the thirtieth of June, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-one," approved September twenty-eight, eighteen hundred and fifty, granting extra pay to the officers and enlisted inen of the Army serving in Oregon and California, to the officers and men of the two companies of regiment of mounted riflemen that garrisoned the post of Fort Laramie, Oregon route, during the time they occupied said post...........[Indefinite.] To pay to Richard B. Lee, late commissary of the Pacific division of the army, the sum of eleven hundred and seventy-five dollars, with interest from the ninth of June, eighteen hundred and fifty, being for money lost in being transported from Honolulu to San Francisco, under his charge, and for which he has accounted to the Department, and which sum includes the expenses incurred in efforts to recover the same.......

1,367 70

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By the act making appropriations for the Naval service for the year ending the thirtieth of June, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-four. For pay of commission, warrant, and petty officers, and seamen, including the Engineer Corps of the Navy... $2,880,148 00 To pay to the officers, petty officers, and seamen of the United States Navy, to the officers, noncommissioned officers, musicians, and privates of the Marine Corps, and to the officers and men of the Revenue service who served in the Pacific ocean, on the coast of California and Mexico, during the late war with Mexico, and since the conclusion of the war up to the twenty-eighth of September, eighteen hundred and fifty, the same additional compensation as has been by law directed to be paid to the officers and soldiers of the Army who served in California. [Indefinite.] To allow to Lieutenant William Lewis Herndon and Lardner Gibbon, officers of the United States Navy, who were engaged upon the exploration of the Amazon, the same pay as has been allowed to the Superintendent of the Naval Astronomical Expedition in Chili, by the act making appropriations for the naval service, approved March third, eighteen hundred and fifty-one, during the period of their service as aforesaid, which period shall be reckoned from the date on which each officer left the United States until the final return of the exploring party... For pay of superintendents, naval constructors, and all the civil establishments at the several navy-yards and stations...... For provisions for commission, warrant, and petty officers and seamen, including engineers and marines attached to vessels for sea service,686,200 00 For the completion of a scientific investigation and experiments upon the character of alimentary substances, used as subsistence in the Navy, and means to prevent their deterioration....

..[Indefinite.]

.108,650 00

5,000 00

For surgeons' necessaries and appliances for the sick and hurt of the Navy, including the Marine Corps..... .... 37,300 00 For repair of vessels in ordinary, and for wear and tear of vessels in commission, including fuel and purchase of hemp....

.1,941,450 00 For ordnance and ordnance stores, and smallarms, including incidental expenses.... .200,000 00 For preparing for publication the American Nautical Almanac... 19,000 00 For the purchase of nautical instruments required for the use of the Navy, for repairs of the same, and also of astronomical instruments... 11,000 00 For the purchase of nautical books, maps, and charts, and for backing and binding the same.. 12,500 00 For printing and publishing sailing directions, hydrographical surveys, and astronomical ob servations.

.....

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For purchase of land, extending walls, making new roads and wharf, building and furnishing hospital, and changing the fronts of houses, at the Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland.. 38,000 00 For meterological observations, to be conducted under the directions of the Secretary of the Navy.........

..... 2,000 00

For construction, extension, and completion of the following objects, and for contingent expenses at the several navy-yards, viz: Portsmouth, New Hampshire. For cooper's shop and watchman's quarters, dredging in front, and pointing and puddling stone basin, boiler-room, boilers, engine and machinery, reservoir for engine house, pipes, gutters, drains, and cisterns, grading yard near timber shed, and for repairs of all kinds, including care of floating dock...

Boston, Massachusetts.

For rebuilding smithery, cooperage, and packing-house, coal-house, for rope-walk, engines, stone wall west of timber-dock, rebuilding battery, grading and paving timber-shed number thirty-one, and for repairs of all kinds........

New York, New York. For completing commander's house, smithery, timber shed; lime, pitch, and coal-house; continuing quay wall, muster office, cob wharf; dredging channel and piers; completing engine-house, culvert, and removing piles in front of dock; filling in timber-pond and low places; paving gutters and flagging, and for repairs of all kinds......

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For extending quay-wharves, completing timber
dock, machinery for engine, machine and ar-
morers' shop, dredging, filling in low grounds,
grading, completing magazine and keeper's
house, Fort Norfolk, hauling up slips and mud
scows, and for repairs of all kinds............ 114,600 00
Pensacola, Florida.

For permanent wharf, paint-shops, and cooperage, construction of deep basin and dredging, rebuilding central wharf, and wharves J and C, smoke-stack, and extending machine-shops, mooring anchors, cables, and fixtures for mooring and operating floating dock, and for 5,500 00 repairs of all kinds..

7,240 00

3,160 00

For models, drawing, and copying, postage, stationery, freight, and transportation; for pay of lithographer, and for working lithographic press, including chemicals; for keeping grounds and buildings in order; for fuel and lights; for repairs of buildings, and for all other contingent expenses of the Hydrographical Office and United States Observatory.. For continuing the publication of the Wind and Current Charts, and for defraying all the expenses connected therewith... 10,000 00 For pipes for carrying gas to, and fixtures for lighting with it, the National Observatory..... 2,500 00 For the wages of persons employed at the Observatory and Hydrographical Office, viz: one lithographer, one instrument maker, two watchmen, and one porter.... For contingent expenses that may accrue for the following purposes, viz: freight and transportation, printing and stationery, advertising in newspapers, books, maps, models, and drawings, purchase and repair of fire-engines and machinery, repairs of, and attending to steam-engines in navy-yards, purchase and maintenance of horses and oxen, and driving teams, carts, timber wheels, and the purchase and repair of workmen's tools, postage of public letters, furniture for Government houses, fuel, oil, and candles for navy-yards and shore stations, pay of watchmen and incidental labor not chargeable to any other appropriation, labor attending the delivery of stores on civil stations, wharfage, dockage, and rent, traveling expenses of officers and others under orders, funeral expenses, store and office rent, stationery, fuel, commissions and pay of clerks to navy agents and storekeepers, flags, awnings, and packing boxes, premiums and other expenses of recruiting, apprehending deserters, per diem pay to persons attending courtsmartial and courts of inquiry, and other services authorized by law, pay to judges-advocate, pilotage and towage of vessels and as

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To complete and carry into execution the verbal contract for a basin and railway in California, in connection with the floating dock, as made by the late Secretary of the Navy in pursuance of authority for that purpose, given by the act of September the twenty-eighth, one thousand eight hundred and fifty, entitled "An act inaking appropriations for the naval service for the year ending the thirtieth of June, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-one," and as stated in the letter of the said late Secretary, addressed to the Hon. Howell Cobb, Speaker of the House of Representatives, and dated the twenty-first day of January, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-one........ .....150,000 00 FOR HOSPITALS.-At Boston.

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For the pay of Interpreters, per acts of the thirtieth June, eighteen hundred and thirty-four, and twenty-seventh February, eighteen hundred and fifty-one... For the pay of clerk to Superintendent at St. Louis, Missouri, per act of twenty seventh June, eighteen hundred and forty-six..... For the pay of clerk to Superintendent at Van Buren, Arkansas, per act of twenty-seventh June, eighteen hundred and forty-six.. For the pay of clerk to Superintendent in California, per act of third March, eighteen hundred and fifty-two... For office rent, fuel, lights, and stationery, for the Superintendent of Indian Affairs in Oregon..... For traveling expenses of Superintendent of Indian Affairs in Oregon and agents therein..... For general incidental expenses of the Indian service in the State of California.... For general incidental expenses of the Indian service in the Territory of New Mexico...... 10,000 00 For general incidental expenses of the Indian service in the Territory of Utah...... For expenses already incurred, and that may hereafter be necessary, for vaccination of Indians....

32D CONG.....2D SESS.

For the purchase of land, to be used as a road communicating with the Navy hospital grounds at Norfolk, Virginia...

For repairs of all kinds.....

At Pensacola.

For wall around hospital grounds..

For draining and filling ponds...............................
For repairs of all kinds....

FOR MAGAZINES.-At Boston, Massachu

At New York.

For fitting storerooms, work-shops, and machinery for ordnance purposes, for gun-skids, graveling ordnance grounds, and for repairs of all kinds.....

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per acts of fifth June, eighteen hundred and fifty, twenty-seventh February, eighteen hundred and fifty-one, and third March, eighteen hundred and fifty-two..... For the pay of the several Indian agents, per acts of fifth June, eighteen hundred and fifty, twenty-eighth September, eighteen hundred and fifty, and twenty seventh February, eighteen hundred and fifty one.....

43,750 00

stipulated in the second article of the treaty of twenty-ninth of July, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven......

For seventeenth of twenty installments for the support of farmers, purchase of implements, grain or seed, and to carry on their agricultural pursuits, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twenty-ninth of July, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven.

For seventeenth of twenty installments for the purchase of provisions, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twenty-ninth of July, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven For seventeenth of twenty installments for the purchase of tobacco, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of twenty ninth July, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven...

For twelfth of twenty-five installments in money, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of October, eighteen hundred and forty-two.......

For twelfth of twenty-five installments in goods, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of October, eighteen hundred and forty-two... For twelfth of twenty-five installments for the support of two smiths' shops, including the pay of two smiths, and furnishing iron and steel, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of October, eighteen hundred and forty-two....

3,000 00

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500 00

12,500 00

10,500 00

2,000 00

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For twelfth of twenty-five installments, for the pay of two farmers, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of October, eighteen hundred and forty-two.... For twelfth of twenty-five installments for the pay of two carpenters, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of October, eighteen hundred and forty-two.... For twelfth of twenty five installments for the support of schools, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of October, eighteen hundred and forty-two............ For twelfth of twenty-five installments for the purchase of provisions and tobacco, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of October, eighteen hundred and forty-two... 2,000 00

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For foundations of guns and shells, for machinery, for bouching shells, and preparing filling, and tank-houses, and for repairs of all kinds.. 4,500 00 At Pensacola.

For preparing platform for saluting battery, and for repairs of all kinds..

Marine Corps.

For pay of officers, non-commissioned officers, privates, musicians, clerks, messengers, stewards, and servants serving on shore; for rations and clothing for servants, subsistence for officers, and pay for undrawn clothing and rations, bounties for reënlistments, and pay for unexpired terms of previous service.. For provisions for marines serving on shore.... For clothing.....

6,000 00

For fuel............................... For military stores, repair of arms, pay of armorers, accouterments, ordnance stores, flags, drums, fifes, and musical instruments.... 8,000 00 For transportation of officers and troops, and expenses of recruiting...... .... 12,000 00 For repairs of barracks and rent of temporary barracks, and offices, where there are no public buildings for that purpose..... For contingencies, viz: freight, tonnage, toll, cartage, warfage, compensation to judges advocate, per diem for attending courts-martial, courts of inquiry, and for constant labor, houserent in lieu of quarters, burial of deceased marines, printing, stationery, postage, apprehension of deserters, oil, candles, forage, straw, furniture, bed sacks, spades, axes, picks, shovels, carpenters' tools, keep of a horse for the messenger, pay of matron, washerwoman, and porter, at the hospital headquarters... For the purpose of paying the lien existing on the lands recently purchased as an addition to the navy-yard at Brooklyn..... For the service of continuing the survey of the coast of the Gulf of Mexico from Appalachi cola bay to the Mississippi river, by the act of March third, eighteen hundred and forty-one, and which has been carried to the credit of the surplus fund, be, and is hereby, reappropriated to pay for the services of the officer or officers employed in that survey..

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To the Chippewas of Saganaw. For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the third of August, seventeen hundred and ninety-five.......

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of seventeenth November, eighteen hundred and seven...

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of twenty-fourth of September, eighteen hundred and nineteen.. For permanent provision for the support of blacksmiths, and for farming utensils and cattle, and for the employment of persons to aid them in agriculture, stipulated in the eighth article of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of September, eighteen hundred and nineteen, and the seventh article of the treaty of fourteenth of January, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven...... For education, during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the sixth article of the treaty of the fifth of August, eighteen hundred and twentysix

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For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of January, eighteen hundred and twenty six... 20,000 00 For permanent provision for blacksmith and assistant, stipulated in the eighth article of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-six.. For iron, steel, &c., for shops, stipulated in the eighth article of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-six, For seventeenth of twenty installments for the pay of two blacksmiths and assistants, stipulated in the thirtieth article of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-two.

270 00

1,680 00

540 00

600 09

1,000 00 For iron, steel, &c., stipulated in the thirtieth ar ticle of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-two... For permanent provision for the pay of a wheelwright, stipulated in the eighth article of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-six... For twenty-third of thirty-three installments for education, stipulated in the thirteenth article of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of March, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-two, and fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of January, eighteen hundred and forty-five..... 3,000 00 For interest on three hundred and fifty thousand dollars, at five per centum, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the twenty-third of November, eighteen hundred and thirtyeight....

3,000 00

600 00

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the thirteenth article of the treaty of the eighteenth of October, eighteen hundred and twenty. For permanent annuity for education, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of twentieth of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-five, 6,000 00 For permanent provision for blacksmith, stipn lated in the sixth article of the treaty of the eighteenth of October, eighteen hundred and twenty, and the ninth article of the treaty of twentieth of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-five....

For iron and steel, &c., for shop, stipulated in the ninth article of the treaty of twentieth of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-five...

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For tenth of twenty installments for education, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of January, eighteen hundred and forty-five...

For blacksmith and assistant during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the fourteenth of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-three.... For iron, steel, and coal, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the fourteenth of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-three For wagon-maker, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the fourteenth of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-three

For agricultural implements, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the eighth article of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-six............ For education, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the fourteenth of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-three

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32D CONG....2D SESS.

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the thirtieth of September, eighteen hundred and nine ..... For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the third of October, eighteen hundred and eighteen..... For permanent annuity, stipulated in the supplemental treaty of the twenty-fourth of September, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine... For life annuity to chiefs, stipulated in the private article of supplemental treaty of the twentyfourth of September, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine, to the treaty of the third of October, eighteen hundred and eighteen........ For life annuity to chiefs, stipulated in the supplemental article of the treaty of the twentysixth of October, eighteen hundred and thirty

two.....

For permanent provision for the purchase of salt, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the seventh of June, eighteen hundred and three.. For permanent provision for blacksmith and assistant, stipulated in the sixth article of the treaty of third of October, eighteen hundred and eighteen.....

For iron, steel, &c., for shop, stipulated in the sixth article of the treaty of the third of October, eighteen hundred and eighteen... For interest on forty-six thousand and eighty dollars, at five per centum, being the value of thirty-six sections of land set apart by treaty of eighteen hundred and twenty-nine, for education, stipulated in resolution of the Senate of the nineteenth of January, eighteen hundred and thirty-eight........

Florida Indians, or Seminoles. For the removal and subsistence of Seminoles now in Florida...

For tenth of fifteen installments in goods, stipulated in the sixth article of the treaty of the fourth of January, eighteen hundred and fortyfive.....

500 00

4,000 00

1,000 00

200 00

100 00

100 00

720 00

220 0

[blocks in formation]

For eighteenth of twenty installments for two blacksmiths and assistants, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the third of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-six.... For eighteenth of twenty installments for iron, steel, &c., for shops, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the third of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-six.... For eighteenth of twenty installments for the purchase of provisions, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the third of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-six... For eighteenth of twenty installments for the purchase of two thousand pounds of tobacco, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of third of September, eighteen hundred and thirtysix...

For eighteenth of twenty installments for farming utensils and cattle, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the third of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-six.... For eighteenth of twenty installments for thirty barrels of salt, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the third of September, eighteen bundred and thirty-six.....

For second of fifteen installments for pay of miller, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the eighteenth of October, eighteen hundred and forty-eight...

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in the fourth article of the treaty of the twentyeighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirtysix........

For nineteenth of twenty installments for the purchase of five hundred fish barrels, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twentyeighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirtysix For three blacksmiths and assistants for twenty years, and during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the seventh article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty six..

For iron, steal, &c., for shops, for twenty years, and during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the seventh article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-six.... For gunsmith at Mackinac for twenty years, and during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the seventh article of the treaty of the twentyeighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirtysix...... For iron, steal, &c., for shop, for twenty years, and during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the seventh article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of March, eighteen hundred and thir ty-six.... For two farmers and assistant, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the seventh article of the treaty of the twenty eighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-six...... For two mechanics, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the seventh article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-six..

200 00

400 00

2,160 00

660 00

600 00

220 00

1,600 00

1,200 00

Osages.

720 00

[blocks in formation]

2,304 00

.200,000 00

2,000 00

220 00

[blocks in formation]

500 00

Ottoes and Missourias.

For tenth of fifteen installments in money, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fourth of January, eighteen hundred and forty-five.....

Iowas.

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For permanent provision for the purchase of one thousand pounds of tobacco, two thousand pounds of iron, and one thousand pounds of steel, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-third of October, eighteen hundred and twenty-six.. For permanent provision for pay of miller in lieu of gunsmith, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the sixth of October, eighteen hundred and eighteen, and the fifth article of the treaty of the twenty-fourth of October, eighteen hundred and thirty-four..... For permanent provision for the purchase of one hundred and sixty bushels of salt, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the sixth of October, eighteen hundred and eighteen..... For education and support of poor during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the sixth article of the treaty of the twenty third of October, eighteen hundred and twenty-six.... 2,000 00 For thirteenth of twenty installments in money, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of November, eighteen hundred and forty.

For permanent provision for payment in lieu of laborers, stipulated in the sixth article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of November, eighteen hundred and forty..

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For iron, steel, &c., for shops, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fifteenth of July, eighteen hundred and thirty

For education, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-first of September, eighteen hundred and thirty three.. For pay of farmer, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the twenty-first of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-three....

For blacksmith and assistant, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fifteenth of July, eighteen hundred and thirty.

For iron, steel, &c., during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fifteenth of July, eighteen hundred and thirty..

Ottowas.

For sixteenth of twenty installments for two smiths' establishments, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the eleventh of January, eighteen hundred and thirty nine.... For interest on sixty-nine thousand one hundred and twenty dollars, at five per centum, being the valuation of fifty four sections of land, set apart by the treaty of the second of June, eighteen hundred and twenty-five, for educational purposes, per resolution of the Senate of the nineteenth of January, eighteen hundred and thirty-eight........

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For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the third of August, seventeen hundred and ninety-five..... For permanent annuity, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the seventeenth of November, eighteen hundred and seven...... For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the seventeenth of September, eighteen hundred and eighteen... For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-ninth of August, eighteen hundred and twenty-one.... 1,000 00

Ottawas and Chippewas.

For nineteenth of twenty installments, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twentyeighth day of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-six...

For interest to be paid as annuity, on two hundred thousand dollars at six per cent. per annum, stipulated in the resolution of the Senate of the twenty-seventh of May, eighteen hundred and thirty-six.....

1,500 00

30,000 00

12,000 00

5,000 00

For education for twenty years, and during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of twenty-eighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-six.... For missions for twenty years, and during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-six....... 3,000 00 For vaccine matter, medicines, and pay of physicians, so long as the Indians remain on their reservation, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-six.... For nineteenth of twenty installments for the purchase of provisions, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth March, eighteen hundred and thirty-six.. For nineteenth of twenty instaliments for the purchase of six thousand five hundred pounds of tobacco, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty eighth of March, eighteen hundred and thirty-six....

For nineteenth of twenty instaliments for the purchase of one hundred barrels of salt, stipulated

300 00

2,000 00

800 00

Pottawatomies of Huron.

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the seventeenth of November, eighteen hundred and seven......... Pottawatomies.

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the third of August, seventeen hundred and ninety five.... For permanent annuity, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the thirtieth of September, eighteen hundred and nine... For permanent annuity, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the second of October, eighteen hundred and eighteen.....

400 00

1,000 00

500 00

2,500 00

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the second,
article of the treaty of the twentieth of Sep-
tember, eighteen hundred and twenty-eight... 2,000 00
For life annuity to chiefs, stipulated in the sec-
ond article of the treaty of the twentieth of
September, eighteen hundred and twenty-
eight....

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the second
article of the treaty of the twenty ninth of July,
eighteen hundred and twenty-nine....
For life annuity to chiefs, stipulated in the third
article of the treaty of the twentieth of Octo-
ber, eighteen hundred and thirty two......
For nineteenth of twenty installments as aunu-
ity, stipulated in the third article of the treaty
of the twenty-sixth of September, eighteen
hundred and thirty-three....

For life annuity to chiefs, stipulated in the third
article of the treaty of the twenty-sixth of Sep-
tember, eighteen hundred and thirty-three...
For nineteenth of twenty installments as annui-
ty, stipulated in the second supplemental article
of the treaty of the twenty-sixth of September,
eighteen hundred and thirty-three....
For permanent provision for the purchase of salt,
stipulated in the third article of the treaty of
the seventh of June, eighteen hundred and
three....

For permanent provision for the purchase of one
hundred and sixty bushels of salt, stipulated in
the third article of the treaty of the sixteenth of
October, eighteen hundred and twenty-six....

100 00

16,000 00

400 00

14,000 00

700 00

2,000 00

140 00

320 00

32D CONG.....2D SESS.

For education during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the sixteenth of October, eighteen hundred and twenty-six...... For permanent provision for blacksmith and assistant, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the sixteenth of October, eighteen hundred and twenty six..... For permanent provision for iron, steel &c., for shop, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the sixteenth of October, eighteen hundred and twenty-six... For education during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twentieth of September, eighteen hundred and twenty eight...

For permanent provision for the payment in money, in lieu of two thousand pounds of tobacco, fifteen hundred pounds of iron, and three hundred and fifty pounds of steel, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twentieth of September, eighteen hundred and twenty eight, and the tenth article of the treaty of the fifth of June, eighteen hundred and fortysix....

For permanent provision for blacksmith and assistant, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twentieth of September, eighteen bundred and twenty-eight....

For permanent provision for iron, steel, &c., for shop, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twentieth of September, eighteen hundred and twenty-eight....

For permanent provision for the purchase of fifty barrels of salt, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twenty-ninth of July, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine...... For education during the pleasure of Congress, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-seventh of October, eighteen hundred and thirty two..

For interest on six hundred and forty-three thousand dollars, at five per centum, stipulated in the seventh article of the treaty of the fifth of June, eighteen hundred and forty-six....... To supply a deficiency in the appropriation of September thirtieth, eighteen hundred and fifty, for the payment of the balance of the awards of General William B. Mitchell, commissioner under the treaty of Chicago of the twenty-sixth of September, eighteen hundred and thirtythree, with the Pottawatomies, reported by him to the Secretary of War on the twenty-eighth day of January, eighteen hundred and fortyone, as adjudicated and approved by the said Secretary in his decision of March the third, eighteen hundred and forty-one.......

Quapaws.

For education during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the thirteenth of May, eighteen hundred and thirty-three....

For blacksmith and assistant, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the thirteenth of May, eighteen hundred and thirty three.... For iron, steel, &c., for shop, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the thirteenth of May, eighteen hundred and thirty-three...... For pay of farmer, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the thirteenth of May, eighteen bundred and thirty three.....

Six Nations of New York.

2,000 00

720 00

220 00

1,000 00

300 00

720 00

220 00

250 00

2,000 00

32,150 00

4,200 00

1,000 00

840 00

220 00

600 00

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the sixth
article of the treaty of the eleventh of Novem-
ber, seventeen hundred and ninety-four....... 4,500 00
Senecas of New York.

For permanent annuity, in lieu of interest on
stock, per act of the nineteenth of February,
eighteen hundred and thirty-one................
For interest, in lieu of investment, on seventy-
five thousand dollars, at five per centum, per
act of twenty-seventh of June, eighteen hun-
dred and forty-six..............

Stockbridges.

For interest on sixteen thousand five hundred dollars, at five per centum, stipulated in the ninth article of the treaty of the twenty fourth of November, eighteen hundred and forty-eight, For the reappropriation of this amount, being a part of the sum carried to the surplus fund per warrant number thirteen, dated the thirtieth of June, eighteen hundred and forty-six, for payment of claims (of that portion of the Stockbridge and Munsee tribe of Indians who emigrated West) under the sixth article of the treaty of September third, eighteen hundred and thirty-nine....

6,000 00

3,750 00

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[blocks in formation]

seven....... For seventeenth of twenty installments for the purchase of provisions, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twenty-ninth of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, 5,500 00 For second of fifty installments of interest, at the rate of five per centum, on one million three hundred and sixty thousand dollars, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twentythird of July, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-one.

For second of fifty installments of interest, at the
rate of five per centum, on one hundred and
twelve thousand dollars, being the amount
in lieu of the reservation set apart in the third
article per Senate's amendment to treaty of the
twenty third July, one thousand eight hundred
and fifty-one.....
For second of fifty installments of interest, at the
rate of five per centum, on one million one
hundred and sixty thousand dollars, stipulated
in the fourth article of the treaty of fifth of Au-
gust, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-

one..

For second of fifty installments of interest, at the rate of five per centum, on sixty-nine thousand dollars, being the amount allowed in lieu of the reservation of lands set apart by the third article per Senate's amendment to treaty of fifth of August, one thousand eight hundred and fifty

one.........

Sacs and Foxes of Missouri. For interest on one hundred and fifty thousand four hundred dollars, at five per centum, stipu. lated in the second article of the treaty of the twenty-first of October, eighteen hundred and thirty.......

Sacs and Foxes of Mississippi. For permanent annuity, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the third of November, eighteen hundred and four

For twenty-second of thirty installments, as annuity, stipulated in the third articlé of the treaty of the twenty-first of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two...

For twenty-second of thirty installments for gunsmith, stipulated in fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-first of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two...

For twenty-second of thirty installments for iron, steel, &c., for shop, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-first of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two..... For twenty-second of thirty installments for blacksmith and assistant, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty first of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two.. For twenty-second of thirty installments for iron, steel, &c., stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-first September, eighteen bundred and thirty-two....

For twenty-second of thirty installments for forty barrels of salt, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-first of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two..... For twenty-second of thirty installments for forty kegs of tobacco, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of twenty-first of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two.... For interest on two hundred thousand dollars, at five per centum, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the twenty-first of October, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven... For interest on eight hundred thousand dollars at five per centum, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the eleventh of October, eighteen hundred and forty-two........

Shawnees.

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the third of August, seventeen hundred and ninety-five...... For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-ninth of September eighteen hundred and seventeen...... For permanent provision for the purchase of salt, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the seventh of June, eighteen hundred and three.. For blacksmith and assistant, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the eighth of August, eighteen hundred and thirty-one...

For iron, steel, &c., during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the eighth of August, eighteen hundred and thirty-one..

For the payment in full of all claim under that part of the treaty of eighteen hundred and thirty-one which has relation to the grant of one hundred thousand acres of land, in fee-simple, to the then Ohio Shawnees...

Senecas and Shawnees. For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the seventeenth of September, eighteen hundred and eighteen.... For blacksmith and assistant, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twentieth of July, eighteen hundred and thirty-one....

For iron, steel, &c., for shops, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article

68,000 00

5,600 v0

58,000 00

of the treaty of the twentieth of July, eighteen hundred and thirty-one....

Senecas.

For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-ninth of September, eighteen hundred and seventeen.... For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the seventeenth of September, eighteen hundred and eighteen..... For blacksmith and assistant, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-one.... For iron, steel, &c., for shop, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-one...... For pay of miller, during the pleasure of the President, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the twenty-eighth of February, eighteen hundred and thirty-one............

Wyandotts.

For permanent provision for blacksmith and assistant, stipulated in the eighth article of the treaty of the seventh of March, eighteen hundred and forty-two....

220 00

500 00

500 00

840 00

220 00

600 00

...... 17,500 00

For permanent provision for blacksmith and assistant, stipulated in the eighth article or the treaty of the seventeenth of March, eighteen hundred and forty two...

For permanent provision for iron, steel, &c., for shop, stipulated in the eighth article of the treaty of the seventeenth of March, eighteen hundred and forty-two.

840 00

3,450 00

370 00

7,870 00

For permanent provision for education, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the seventeenth of March, eighteen hundred and fortytwo...

500 00

[blocks in formation]

For twenty-fifth of thirty installments as annuity, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine....

For twenty-second of twenty-seven installments as annuity, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the fifteenth of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two....

For twenty-fifth of thirty installments, for the purchase of fifty barrels of salt, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine... For twenty-fifth of thirty installments, for the purchase of three thousand pounds of tobacco, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine...... For twenty-second of twenty seven installments, for the purchase of one thousand five hundred pounds of tobacco, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the fifteenth of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two.... For twenty-fifth of thirty installments, for three blacksmiths and assistants, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine..... For twenty-fifth of thirty installments, for iron, steel, &c., for shop, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty nine..... For twenty-fifth of thirty installments, for laborers and oxen, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine........

For twenty-second of twenty-seven installments, for education, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fifteenth September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two....

For twenty-second of twenty-seven installments, for six agriculturists, purchase of oxen, plows, and other implements, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of the fifteenth of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two...... For twenty-second of twenty-seven installments, for pay of two physicians, stipulated in the treaty of the fifteenth of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two...

18,000 00

10,000 00

250 00

609 00

300 00

2,160 00

660 00

365 00

3,000 00

2,500 00

400 00

For interest on one million one hundred thousand dollars, at five per centum, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the first of November, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven....... 55,000 00 For interest on eighty-five thousand dollars, at five per centum, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the thirteenth of October, eighteen hundred and forty-six......

Texas Indians.

For compensation to three special agents and four interpreters for the Indian tribes of Texas, and for the purchase of presents..

Miscellaneous.

4,250 00

30,000 00

For payment of the third of ten installments in provisions, merchandise, etc., and the transportation of the same to certain tribes of Indians, per seventh article of the treaty of Fort Laramie, of seventeenth of September, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-one...... 60,000 00

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