Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 45 Part 1.djvu/477

 426 SEVENTIETH CONGRESS. SESS. I. CHs. 359, 362. 1928. tin earip tion-con. "17 . Two hundred and thirty-on e degrees and thirty-one mi nutes one thousand six hundred and seventy-eight and eight-tenths feet along same ; " 1 8. Three hundre d and eightee n degrees eigh t hundred and six- teen and four-tenths feet along same to the boundary between the lands of Keaau and Kahaualea ; " 19. Seventy-two degrees and forty-five minutes one thousand two hundred and thirty-three and three-tenths feet along the land of Kahaualea to a pipe ; "20. Forty-eight degrees six hundred and thirty-four feet along the remain der of Kaha ualea to a p ipe on the Kahaua lea-Ke auhou boundary ; " 21 . Three hundred and thirty-two degrees and ten minutes six thousand five hundred and fifty-one and four-tenths feet along the Kahaualea-Keaau boundary to a pipe ; 11 22 . Two hundred and eighty-one degrees thirty thousand three hundred and one and seven-tenths feet along the remainder of Kahaualea to a pipe ; "23. Thi rty- one degr ees and thir ty m inut es t hirt een thou sand and seventy-four and seven-tenths feet along the remainder of Kahaualea and Panaunui to a pipe, passing over a pipe at five thousand nine hundred and twenty-two and two-tenths feet on the Kahaualea- Panaunui boundary ; " 24 . Eighty-nine degrees and ten minutes thirty-two thousand nine hundred feet along the remainder of Panaunui, across the lands of Apua and Keauhou to ` Palilele-o-Kalihipaa,' at an angle in the Keauh ou-Kap apala bound ary ma rked b y a pi le of stone s, pas sing over pipes at three thousand five hundred and seventy-two and eight- tenths feet on the Panaunui-Apua boundary and eight thousand four hundred and thirty-five and three-tenths feet ; "25. Fifty-one degrees fifty minutes and thirty seconds five thou- sand four hundred and thirty feet across the land of Kapapala ; "26 . One hundred and two degrees and fifty minutes nineteen thousand one hundred and fifty feet across same to a small cone about one thousand five hundred feet southwest of 'Puu Koae' ; "27. One hundred and sixty-six degrees and twenty minutes twenty-one tho usand feet ac ross the land of Kapapala t o the point of beginning " ; and all of those lands lying within the boundary above described are hereby included in and made a part of the Hawa ii N atio nal Park sub ject to all laws and reg ulat ions per tain ing to said park. Acquiring of pr i- SEC . 2. That the_ provisions of the Act of February 27, 1920, vately owned lan ds authorized . entitl ed "An Act o auth orize the Go vernor of t he Ter ritory of Vol. 41,p .452. Hawaii to acqu ire privately owned lands a nd rights of way within the boundaries of the Hawai i National Par k," are hereb y extended over and made applicable to the lands added to the park and included within the boundary established by the preceding section of this Act . Approved, April 11, 1928 . April 12, 1928 . [H. R. 11579.1 CHAP . 362 .-An Act Relating to investigation of new uses of cotton . [Publ ic, No . 270 .] Be it enacted by the Senate and House o f Representatives o f the Cotton . Research authorized United States of America in Congress assembled, That the Secretary in Amer ican-grown, b y- of Agriculture and the Secretary of Commerce are hereby authorized products of, and present and new uses . to engage in technical and scientific research in American-grown Post, p. 1212. cotton and its by-products and their present and potential uses, including new and additional commercial and scientific uses for cotton and its by-products, and to diffuse such information among

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