Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 42 Part 1.djvu/1461

 1434 SIXTY-SEVENTH CONGRESS. Sess. IV. Cns. 191, 215, 216. 1923. N•¤=¤2» 199- CHAP. 191.—Joint Resolution Concerning lands devised to the United States Gov- emment by me na Joseph Battell, or inanebmy, vermont. ymph Bam, Whereas Joseph Battell, deceased, late of Middlebury, county of I"'°°”"’*°· Addison, State of Vermont, in and by his last will and testament devised to the Government of the United States of America about three thousand nine hundred acres of land situated in the towns of Lincoln and Warren, in the State of Vermont, for a national park; and Whereas said lands were devised to the United States of America upon certain conditions, among which were the following: That the Government should construct and maintain suitable roads and buildings upon the land constituting such national (park for the use an accommodation of visitors to such park an should employ suitable caretakers to the end and purgose that the woodland should be properly cared for and preserve so far as possible in its primitive beaut ; and · Whereas it is deemeginexpedient to accept said devise and to estabgah giational park in accordance with the terms thereof: Thereore it Resobved the Senate and House o Re ntatives of the United brD;:i€i°0¤`.;ll]§P;1¥d§,l’l:: States of Abgeriea in Congress asse1fib t the acceptance of ’““°‘· said devise so made by Joseph Battell in his last will and testament mm MM mm be declined by the Government of the United States, and that the museum`? estate of the said Joseph Battell be forever discharged from any obligation to the United States growing out of the devise before mention Approved, March 2, 1923. [Pu1a€?il¢;@°] CHAP. 215.-—An Act Fixing rates of postage on certain kinds of printed matter. C, 0.4. Be it enacted by the Senate and House o Representatives o the giggle Séivilibmiss- United States of America in Congress {assembled, That single €'?‘,,.,°§,‘,§f‘,j,'{“,§’, '?,$,,§{“’ sheets or portions thereof from any publication entered as secondclass matter, sent b a (publisher to an advertiser or the latter’s VOLM, p_3,,_ agent on account of an in proof of the insertion of an adver- ’ tisement, shall, under such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by the Postmaster General, be received and transmitted through the mails at the zone rates of postage applicable under the law to the advertising portions of such second-c ass matter. Approved, March 3, 1923. 1I.¤·cn3 M [S· 574.1 CHAP. 216.--An Act To amend an Act entitled "An Act to save daylight and lH®»N¤- E7-1 to provide standard time for the United States," as amended. ,,,m,m,,,m_ Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the cdV¤1·4¤.¤-¢5¤.¤m¤¤d- United States of America in Congress assembled, That an Act en- ‘ titled “An Act to save daylight and to provide standard time for the United States," approved March 19, 1918, as amended, be, and the same hereby is, further amended by addi thereto after section 2 and before section 4, an additional section tgie known as section 3, PWM of who as follows: . axigned to tbirdlzone. _ “_Sec. 3. In the division of territory, and in the dehnition of the limits of each zone, as hereinbefore rovided, so much of the Stat of Idaho as lies south of the Salmon River, traversin the State from east to west near forty-five degrees thirty minutes ititude shall be embraced in the third zone." Approved, March 3, 1923.