Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 34 Part 1.djvu/834

 804 F IFTY-NINTH CONGRESS. Sess. I. CHS. 3928, 3929. 1906. J¤¤<~>30.1906- CHAP. 3928.-An Act To authorize the Alaska Pacific Railway and Terminal [S" (M3'] Company to construct; a bridge across the Copper River in the Territory of Alaska. [Public, No. 3W.] _ _ _ Comm River Am, Be zt enacted by t/te Senate and House ofltepresentatzves oft/te United ka. ’ _ States of America zn Congress assembled, That the Alaska Pacific Railwf,}““§;({°°?FmE§m*§§‘Qi way and Terminal Company, a corporation organized under the laws Gvmlamr mw bridze of the State of Washington, its successors and assigns, be, and they nc im G1°°m' are hereby, authorized to construct, maintain, and operate a railroad bridge and approaches thereto, across the Copper River, at or near Childs Glacier,hin the Territgry of Alaska, in accorgance with the A¤¢¢.1>·84- provisions of the Act entitle "An Act to regu ate the construction of bridges oxéer ngvigable waters," approved March twenty-third, nine- M teen hun re an six. ·A¤¤¤¤d¤¤<=¤¢- Sec. 2. That the right to alter, amend, or repeal this Act is hereby expressly reserved. Approved, June 30, 1906. U  Act To incorporate the National Education Association of the [Public, N o. 398.] Be tt enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United Di¤¤Ii¢*¤fC<>1¤¤¤*2i¤- States 0_fAmerica in Congress assembled, That the following-named National Education . Association or the persons, who are now the officers and directors and trustees of the g§,f§d_S‘“‘“ ""’°" National Educational Association, a corporation organized in the year eighteen hundred and eighty-six, under the Act of general incorporation of the revised statutes of the District of Columbia, namely: I“°°"°"“°°”· Nathan C. Schaeffer, Eliphalet Oram Lyte, John W. Lansinger, of Pennsylvania; Isaac W. Hill, of Alabama; Arthur J. Matthews, of Arizona; John H. Hinemon, George B. Cook, of Arkansas; Joseph O’Connor, Josiah L. Pickard, Arthur H. Chamberlain, of éjalifprnia; Aaron Gove, Ezekiel H. Look, Lewis C. Greenlee, of Colora o; C arles H. Keves, of Connecticut; Geor e W. Twitmyer, of Delaware; J. Ormond Vlrilson, William T. Ilariiis, Alexander T. Stuart, of the District of Columbia; Clem Hampton, of Florida; William M. Slaton, of Georgia'; Frances Mann, of Idaho; J. Stanley Brown, Albert G. Lane, Charles l. Parker, John WV. Cook, Joshua Pike, Allbert R. aylor,. ose li A. Mercer, of Illinois; Nebraska Cropsey, T omas A. Mott, of Indiana; John D. Benedict, of Indian Territory; John I1`. Riggs, Ashley V. Storm, of Iowa; John W. Spindler, Jasper N. Wilkinson, A. V. Jewett. Luther I). Whittemore, of Kansas; William Henry Bartholomew, of Kentucky; Warren Easton, of Louisiana; Jphp S. Lacke, of glainez M. Bates Stephens, of Mharyland; Charles . Iliot, it ary ll. unt, Ilenrj 'I`. Bailey, of Massac usetts; Hu h A. Graham, Charles G. White, \V,illiam H. Elson, of Michigan; Wgliani E Phelps, Iéwin Shepard, John A. Cranston, of Minnesota; Robert B. u ton, of l' ississi i: F. Louis Soldan, James M. Greenwood, \Vilbam?.]. Hawlgini, ci? Missouri; Oscar J. Craig, ofx Montana; George l.owne, o Pelirasksiz Jose h E. Stubbs, of Nevada; James E. Klock, of New Hampshire; Jariies M. Green, John Enright, of New Jersey; Charles M. Light, of New Mexico; James H. Canfield, Nicholas Murray Butler. William H. Maxwell, Charles R. Skinner, Albert P. Marble. James (I. Byrnes. of New York; James Y. Joyner, Julius Isaac Poust. of North Carolina; Pitt Cordon Knowlton. of North Dakota: Oscar T. Corson., Jacob A. Shawnn. \Vells L. Griswold, of Ohio; Edgar S. Vaught, Andrew R. Hickam, of Oklahoma; Charles Carroll Stratton, Edwin D. Ressler, of Oregon: Thomas YY. Bicknell. Walter Bzillou Jacobs, of Rhode Island; David B. Johnson. Robert P. Pell. of South Carolina; Moritz Adelhert Lange, of South Dakota; Eugene F. Turner, of Tennessee; Lloyd E. Wolfe, of Texas: David H.