ment of these objects, the superintendents heretofore appointed, or hereafter to be appointed, in the states of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, shall, under the direction of the President of the United States, separately superintend, in a faithful manner, such parts of said road as may be designated to each, and disburse the money, each giving bond and security as he shall direct, and shall receive such compensation, as, in his opinion, shall be equitable and just, not exceeding to each, that heretofore allowed by law to the superintendent of the Cumberland road, in the state of Ohio.
Approved, March 2, 1831.
Statute ⅠⅠ.
[Obsolete.]
Chap. LXIV.—An Act making appropriations for the Indian department for the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-one.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the following sums be appropriated, to be paid out of any unappropriated money in the treasury, for the Indian department, for the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-one, viz:
Superintendent of Indian affairs.For pay of the superintendent of Indian affairs at St. Louis and the several Indian agents, as authorized by law, twenty-nine thousand five hundred dollars.
For pay of sub-agents, as authorized by law, nineteen thousand five hundred dollars.
For presents to Indians, as authorized by the act of one thousand eight hundred and twelve, [two] fifteen thousand dollars.1802, ch. 13.
Interpreters, &c.For pay of Indian interpreters and translators employed at the several superintendencies and agencies, twenty-one thousand five hundred and twenty-five dollars.
Gun-smiths, &c.For pay of gun and blacksmiths, and their assistants, employed within the superintendencies and agencies, under the treaty provisions and the orders of the Secretary of War, eighteen thousand three hundred and forty dollars.
Iron, &c.For iron, steel, coal, and other expenses attending the gun and blacksmith’s shops, five thousand four hundred and twenty-six dollars.
Transportation, &c.For expense of transportation and distribution of Indian annuities, nine thousand nine hundred and fifty-nine dollars.
Provisions.For expense of provisions for Indians at the distribution of annuities, while on visits of business, with the different superintendents and agents, and when assembled on business, eleven thousand eight hundred and ninety dollars.
Contingencies.For contingencies of the Indian department, twenty thousand dollars.
Boundary lines.For expenses incurred in surveying the north-western boundary lines of the Miami and Pattawatamie cessions by treaties of sixteenth October, one thousand eight hundred and twenty-six, and twenty-third October, one thousand eight hundred and twenty-six, two hundred and twenty-seven dollars.
For surveying and dividing the reservation granted to the half-breed Sacs and Foxes by the treaty of fourth August, one thousand eight hundred and twenty-four, two thousand dollars.
Depredations.For the payment of sundry claims for Indian depredations, heretofore allowed at the Department of War, one thousand three hundred dollars.
Emigration, &c.Act of May 9, 1828, ch. 47.For payments made for provisions and necessary assistance to Indians emigrating to the west, and to those tribes now settled on or near the Kansas river, west of the Missouri, in addition to the appropriation heretofore made for that object by act of ninth May, one thousand eight hundred and twenty eight, three thousand five hundred and sixty-two dollars, eighty-six cents.