Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 36 Part 2.djvu/365

 SIXTY-FIRST CONGRESS. Sess. II. CHS. 307, 308, 332, 333. 1910. 1809 CHAP. 307.-An Act For the relief of Demon S. Decker. {aug Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United [rams, N¤.1oz.] States_of America in (Jim ness assembled, That in the administration of Demon S_ D,,,,m_ any laws conferring riglits, privileges, or benefits upon honorably mgg;l·°·1'Y mem wr discharged soldiers Demon S. Decker, who was a first lieutenant of ' Company G, Fiftisixth Regiment New York Volunteer Infantry, . shall hereafter be eld and considered to have been discharged honorably from the militar service of the United States as a first ieutenant of said company and re iment on the third day of April, eighteen Bm hundred and sixty-four: grovzkled, That, other than as above Set forth, ' no bounty, pa, pension, or other emolument shall accrue prior to or _ by reason of tlie passage of this Act. Approved, June 17, 1910. CHAP. 308.-An Act To appropriate the sum of two hundred dollars for Fenton ·1¤¤¢ 17· 1910- T. Ross, of Loudoun County, ‘$irginia, whose horse was permanently mjured by  employees of the Agricultural Department in making experiments authorized by law. [Private, No. 108.] Be it enacted by tbe Senate and House of Rfpresentatz7ves of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary of the §§§§,,'{,E_°"‘ Treasury be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed to pay to Fenton T. Ross, of Loudoun County, Virginiaé the sum of two hundred dollars, which sum is hereby appropriate out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to reimburse the mid Fenton T. Ross for the loss of a horse which was permanently h§ured on May eighteenth, nineteen hundred and nine, y becoming entangled in a piece of steel wire which had fallen across his plasture, in w ich said orse was grazin, said wire having become detac ed from certain kites living from thegllnited States Weather Bureau at Mount Weather, Virginia. Approved, June 17, 1910; _""_"_'*' Juigegéarslo. CHAP. 332.-An Act For the relief of Benjamin Hyde. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of R esentatviveso the United States of America in Congress assembled, Tliiit the Secreitlary of the ii$$i¤°gil¤gyd°' Treasury be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed to pag'; out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise a propriated, to njamin Hyde, the sum of one hundred and thirty-iiour dollars and seventy- eight cents, for extra materials and labor furnished by said_Hyde in the construction of a temporary post-omce at Chicago, Illinois. Approved, June 22, 1910. ""'”""_" Jun; 2‘24E_§910. CHAP. 333.-An Act For the relief of Rasmus K. Hafsos. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Resentatives 0 the United States of Ame¢·z`ea‘in Congress assembled, mt the Secrgary of the §RL"`yE35¢.,?“£°°°' Treasury be, and he is hereby, authorized to pay to Rasmus K. Hafsos of Aberdeen, South Dakota, the sum of two thousand five hundred ‘ and sixty dollars, and Said sum of two thousand five hundred and sim dollars or so much thereof as may be necessary is hereby appropria out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise a ropriate in settlement of his claim for payment of amount withheld, as liquidated damages under a certain contract for the construction of certain building; for Indian school purposes at Bismarck, North Dakota, entemd in by and between the said Rasmus K. Hafsos and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and approved b the Secretary of the Interior, dated December fourteenth, nineteenbundred and six, out of appropriations heretofore made for said purposes. ‘ Approved, June 22, 1910. - 88741°-—-vox. 36, rr 2——l1—-24