AN ACT to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes, and to preserve peace on the frontiers, approved June 30th, 1834.
SEC. 20. And be it further enacted, That if any person shall sell,
exchange, or give, barter, or
dispose of, any spirituous liquor or
wine to an Indian, (in the Indian country,) such person shall forfeit
and pay the sum of five hundred dollars; and if any person shall
introduce, or attempt to introduce, any
spirituous liquor or wine
into the Indian country, except such supplies as shall be necessary for
the offi-
cers of the United States
person shall forfeit and pay a sum not exceeding three hundred dollars; and if any superintendent of
Indian affairs, Indian agent, or sub-agent, or commanding officer of a military post, has reason to suspect,
or is informed, that any white person or Indian is about to introduce, or has introduced, any spirituous
liquor or wine into the Indian country, in violation of the provisions of this section, it shall be lawful for
such superintendent, Indian gent, or sub-agent, or military officer, agreeably to such regulations as may
be established by the President of the United States, to cause the boats, stores, packages, and places of de-
posite of such person to be searched, and if any such spirituous liquor or wine is found, the goods, boats,
packages, and peltries of such persons shall be seized and delivered to the proper officer, and shall be pro-
ceeded against by libel in the proper court, and forfeited, one half to the use of the informer, and the other
half to the use of the United States; and if such person is a trader, his license shall be revoked and his bond
put in suit. And it shall moreover be lawful for any person in the service of the United States
Indian, to take and destroy any ardent spirits or wine found in the Indian country, excepting military sup-
plies as mentioned in this section.
SEC. 21. And be it further enacted, That if any person whatever shall,
within the limits of the
Indian country, set up or continue any
distillery for manufacturing ardent spirits, he shall forfeit and pay a
penalty of one thousand dollars; and it shall be the duty of the
superintendent of Indian affairs, Indian
agent, or sub-agent,
within the limits of whose agency the same shall be set up or continued,
forthwith to
destroy and break up the same; and it shall be lawful
to employ the military force of the United
States
in executing that duty.
AN ACT to amend an act entitled An act to provide for the better
organization of the Department of Indian Affairs,and an act
en-
titled An act to regulate trade and intercourse with the
Indian tribes, and to preserve peace on the
frontiers,approved
March 3d,
1847.
SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That the twentieth section of the
act to regulate trade and inter-
course with the Indian
tribes, and to preserve peace on the frontiers, approved June thirtieth, eighteen
hundred and
thirty-four, be, and the same is hereby so aamended, that, in
addition to the fines thereby imposed,
any person who shall sell,
exchange or barter, give, or dispose of, any spirituous liquor or wine
to an Indian,
in the Indian country, or who shall introduce, or
attempt to introduce, any spirituous liquor or wine into the
Indian country, except such supplies as may be necessary for officers of
the United States
of the service, under the direction of the War Department, such person, on conviction thereof, before the
proper district court of the United States, shall in the former case be subject to imprisonment for a period
not exceeding two years, and in the latter case not exceeding one year, as shall be prescribed by the court,
and under the twentieth section of the act to regulate trade and intercourse with the Indian tribes, and to
preserve peace on the frontiers, approved June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and thirty-four, to which this is
an ammendment, Indians, shall be competent witnesses.
To the Committee on Indian Concerns
of New York Yearly Meeting
Dear Friends
At a Meeting of the Indian
Committee of Baltimore Yearly
Meeting
In reply to a communication addressed to
the Secretary of War, giving him some account
of the past history & present condition
of our Establishment on the Kanzas river
and requesting from the Department a
copy of the Laws & Regulations for preventing
the introduction of Spirituous liquors into
the Indian Country Adopted at the last
session of Congress
from Wm. McGill
enclosing several copies of the Document
referred to.
The Clerk is directed to forward
a copy of the same to our superintendent
& teacher at our
Establishment and also
to the Indian Committees of New
England
New York
of this minute Signed on behalf of the Committee
Richard H. Thomas
Clerk