Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 5.djvu/812

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Blacksmith.For the support of a blacksmith and assistant, stipulated in the tenth article of the treaty of twenty-ninth September, eighteen hundred and seventeen, seven hundred and twenty dollars;

Iron and steel.For the purchase of iron, steel, &c., for shop, two hundred and twenty dollars;

Blacksmith.
Iron and steel.
For the support of a blacksmith and assistant, stipulated in the eighth article of the treaty of seventeenth March, eighteen hundred and forty-two, seven hundred and twenty dollars; for the purchase of iron, steel, &c., for shop, two hundred and twenty dollars;

Weas.
Annuity.
To the Weas.―For permanent annuity, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty with them on the second of October, eighteen hundred and eighteen, three thousand dollars;

Winnebagoes.
Annuities.
To the Winnebagoes.―For limited annuity, for thirty years, stipulated in the second article of the treaty with them, of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine, eighteen thousand dollars;

For limited annuity, for twenty-seven years, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the fifteenth of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, ten thousand dollars;

Salt.For the purchase of fifty barrels of salt, for thirty years, stipulated in the second article of the treaty of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine, two hundred and fifty dollars;

Tobacco.For the purchase of three thousand pounds of tobacco, for thirty years, stipulated in the same, three hundred and fifty dollars;

For the purchase of one thousand five hundred pounds of tobacco, for twenty-seven years, stipulated in the fifth article of the treaty of fifteenth of September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, one hundred and seventy-five dollars;

Blacksmiths.
Iron and steel.
Laborer and oxen.
For the support of three blacksmiths and assistants for thirty years, stipulated in the third article of the treaty of the first of August, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine, two thousand one hundred and sixty dollars; for the purchase of iron, steel, &c., for shops, six hundred and sixty dollars; for pay of laborer and for oxen, for thirty years, stipulated in the same, three hundred and sixty-five dollars;

Education.For the purpose of education, for twenty-seven years, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of the fifteenth September, eighteen hundred and thirty-two, three thousand dollars;

Physicians.For the pay of two physicians, stipulated in the fifth article of the same, four hundred dollars;

Interest.For interest on investment in stock, at five per centum, one one million one hundred thousand dollars, stipulated in the fourth article of the treaty of first November, eighteen hundred and thirty-seven, fifty-five thousand dollars;

W. Armstrong.For payment to William Armstrong, to make good the loss sustained by him in consequence of the explosion of the boilers of the steamer Cherokee, while transporting government funds from New Orleans to the Indian country west of Arkansas, in the year one thousand eight hundred and forty, one hundred and forty-one dollars.

T. Dole.For payment of the claim of Thomas Dole, for goods and provisions furnished the New York Indians, in the years one thousand eight hundred and thirty-nine and one thousand eight hundred and forty, allowed by the accounting officers of the Treasury, nine hundred and sixty-four dollars and eighty-one cents.

Annuity to the Christian Indians.For the re-appropriation of the annuity due the Christian Indians, for the years one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight and one thousand eight hundred and thirty-nine, refunded by Major Garland, late disbursing agent of the Indian Department, and subsequently used in