Chapter LXIX. for the relief of Charles Burkham and others, employed as spies, on the frontier of Arkansas, in eighteen hundred and thirty
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Chap. LXIX.— An Act for the relief of Charles Burkham and others, employed as spies, on the frontier of Arkansas, in eighteen hundred and thirty.June 24, 1834. *Be it enacted, &c.,* That the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, authorized and required to pay, out of any money in the treasury Allowance to persons named for services as spies. not otherwise appropriated, to Charles Burkham, Josiah F. Little, James E. Hopkins, and Henry Stout, the sum of one hundred and ninety-six dollars each; and to James B.
Anderson, John Roberts, William McCowen, and Thomas Moore, the sum of one hundred and fifty-six dollars each; being in full satisfaction for their respective services as 566TWENTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 70, 73. 1834. spies to the detachment of Arkansas militia, ordered into service by Colonel John Clark, in the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty, on the frontier of the Territory of Arkansas. Approved, June 24, 1834.