Chapter 49. To authorize and direct the Commissioners of the District of Columbia to place the name of Annie M
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CHAP. 49.— An Act To authorize and direct the Commissioners of the District of Columbia to place the name of Annie M. Matthews on the pension roll of the police and firemen’s pension fund. August 22, 1911.[[H. R. 11545](/us/bill/62/hr/11545).][[Private, No. 4](/us/pvtl/62/4).] *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*, Annie M. Matthews.Placed on police pension roll, District of Columbia. That the Commissioners of the District of Columbia be, and they are hereby, authorized and directed to place on the pension roll of the police and firemen’s pension fund the name of Annie M.
Matthews, mother of Hugh C. Matthews, late private, Metropolitan police force of the District of Columbia at the rate of twenty-five dollars per month. Approved, August 22, 1911. PRIVATE ACTS OF THE SIXTY-SECOND CONGRESS of the UNITED STATES *Passed at the second session, which was begun and held at the city of Washington, in the District of Columbia, on Monday, the fourth day of December, 1911, and was adjourned without day on Monday, the twenty-sixth day of August, 1912*. William Howard Taft, President;
James Schoolcraft Sherman, Vice President; Charles Curtis, President of the Senate *pro tempore*, December 5 to 12, 1911; Augustus O. Bacon, President of the Senate *pro tempore*, January 15 to 17, March 11 and 12, April 8, May 10, 30, and 31, June 1 to 3, June 13 to July 5, August 1 to 10, and from end of session to December 16, 1912; Jacob H. Gallinger, President of the Senate *pro tempore*, February 12, 13, and 14, April 26 and 27, May 7, July 6 to 31, and August 12 to end of session;
Frank B. Brandegee, President of the Senate *pro tempore*, March 25 and 26, 1912; Henry Cabot Lodge, President of the Senate *pro tempore*, May 25, 1912; Champ Clark, Speaker of the House of Representatives; Joshua W. Alexander, Speaker of the House of Representatives *pro tempore*, July 1, 1912.