Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 30.djvu/1247

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

FIFTY-FIFTH CONGRESS. Sess. III. Ch. 426. 1899. 1209 " To Anna W. Osborne the sum of six hundred dollars, the same being fi i- ¤•1i•¤¤·>¤• the value of personal property belonging to her and to John W. Osborne, ° °im°`c°°""°d' her late husband, of the United States Army, destroyed by fire at the destruction of the post ho pital at Fort Ripley, Minnesota, July twenty- iirst, eighteen hundred and seventy. To Daniel W. Perkins, late of East Saginaw, Michigan, now of New York City, the sum of one thousand and forty-Eve dollars, for his services rendered as substitute district attorney of the eastern district of Michigan irom October first, eighteen hundred and seventy-one, to June thirtieth, eighteen hundred and seventy-five. To John L. Rhea, executor of Samuel Rhea, deceased, the sum of twelve thousand eight hundred and twenty-five dollars and sixty-one cents, and to John Anderson, administrator of Joseph R. Anderson, deceased, the sum of one thousand eight hundred and three dollars and thirty-five cents, being the proportion to which each is entitled in sixty-three bales of cotton taken and receipted for by E. Hade, captain and assistant quartermaster, on the nineteenth day of September, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, at Atlanta, Georgia, and turned over to the United States Treasury agents, and by them sold and the proceeds turned over to the United States Treasury, as found in the Court ot Claims in the case of John H. Fain against the United States. To the executor of C. M. Shader, deceased, of Berkeley County, West Virginia, the sum of one thousand four hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be found necessary, in payment for rent and occupation of his warehouse in the town of Martinsburg, in said county and State, as a commissary storehouse during the war of the rebellion: Provided, That the Secretary of the Treasury is satisfied after examining the claim that said warehouse wa actually occupied by the United ‘ States for the purpose alleged; and the claim shall be allowed at the rate of fifty dollars a month for such time as it was so occupied and not aid for. P To the legal representative of Thomas Sherwin, deceased, late of Washington County, Maryland, the sum of eight hundred and twenty dollars, for stores and supplies furnished the Army of the United States during the late war, said sum having been fixed by the Quartermaster- General as fair compensation for the same. To Henry W. Shipley, the sum of two thousand tour hundred and eighty-seven dollar and thirty-eight cents, for work done and material furnished by him in excess of what was required of him by his agreement with the Indian Bureau in the construction of a gristmill and sawmill at Nez Perce Indian Agency, in the Territory of Idaho. To the legal representatives of Mrs. Adeline Shirley, the sum of eight thousand three hundred and forty-eight dollars and rlfty-seven cents, in payment for property taken near Vicksburg, Mississippi, for the use of the United States Army, in the year eighteen hundred and sixt ·three. Tg James Sims, of Marshall County, Mississippi, the sum of six thousand three hundred and thirty eight dollars, for quartermaster and commissary stores furnished the Army of the United States in the years eighteen hundred and sixty-two and eighteen hundred and sixty- three. To the legal representatives of Hiram Somerville, deceased, late of Marion County, Illinois, the sum of hve hundred and five dollars, for supplies furnished by him to the United States. To Peter Grant Stewart, of Gervais, Oregon, the sum of seven thousand five hundred dollars, for property owned by him and taken by the United States and included within the military reservation near the mouth of the Columbia River, in Pacific County, then Territory, now State, of Washington, taken under and by virtue of an Executive order dated Washington, District of Columbia, February twenty-sixth, eighteen hundred and fifty-two. To W. H. B. Stout, Cyrus J. Hall, and Isaac S. Bangs, late doing business under the style and firm name of Stout, Hall and Bangs, and J. M. Vale, the sum of thirty-one thousand eight hundred and two