An Act to amend and reenact § 46.1-299, as amended, of the Code of Virginia, relating to devices signalling intention to turn or stop and rules therefor.
Volume 1968 Law 99
Volume | 1899/1900 |
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Law Number | 1246 |
Subjects |
Law Body
Chap. 1246.—An ACT for the relief of J. W. Jeans, a disabled Confederate
soldier.
Approved March 7, 1900.
Whereas J. W. Jeans, a disabled Confederate soldier, and a true and
gallant soldier during the late war, and was loyal to Virginia; and
Whereas he is now totally disabled on account of injuries received
during the war; therefore,
1. Be it enacted by the general assembly of Virginia, That the
county court of Greenesville shall examine into the condition of the
above-named J. W. Jeans, a Confederate soldier, and should it be found
that he was true and loyal to Virginia through the war, and that he is
now afflicted, diseased, and incapacitated for manual labor, the result
of said injuries reccived during the war, and that he is needy, poor, and
should receive aid from Virginia, and if the county court of Greenesville
county should send a certificate of the facts to the auditor of public
accounts of Virgimia, as herein set forth, then the auditor of public
accounts is directed to place the name of the said J. W. Jeans on the
pension list, and pay him annually the sum of fifteen dollars on and
after the first day of April, nineteen hundred.
2. This act shall be in force from its passage.