Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 3.djvu/135

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Sum to be paid to recruits, be $124.
When paid.
Representatives of persons killed or dying in the service of the United States, how provided for.
enlisted into the army of the United States, to serve for the term of five years, or during the war, at his election, in lieu of the bounty in money and of the three months’ pay at the expiration of the service now allowed by law, the sum of one hundred and twenty-four dollars; fifty dollars of which to be paid at the time the recruit is enlisted, fifty dollars when he shall be mustered and have joined some military corps for service, and twenty-four dollars when he shall be discharged from service; and the wife and children, and, if he leave no wife or children, the parents of such non-commissioned officer and soldier enlisted as herein before stated, who may be killed in action, or die in the service of the United States, shall be allowed and paid the said sum of twenty-four dollars; and after the said first day of February next, so much of the fourth section of the act, entitled Act of January 20, 1813, ch. 12.An act for the more perfect organization of the army of the United States,” passed the twentieth day of January, one thousand eight hundred and thirteen, as allows to each able-bodied man enlisted into the service of the United States, in the manner therein stated, an advance of twenty-four dollars on account of his pay, shall be, and the same is hereby repealed.

Non-commissioned officers, soldiers and citizens to be entitled to eight dollars for every recruit procured, &c.Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That the sum of eight dollars shall be paid to any non-commissioned officer, soldier, or citizen, who shall, after the first day of February next, furnish and procure to be enlisted, according to law, an able-bodied man, to serve for the term of entitled to five years, or during the war.

Soldiers enlisted into the regular army of the United States may re-enlist for five years, or during the war.
Act of April 8, 1812, ch. 53.
Act of Jan. 29, 1813, ch. 15.
Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, That every non-commissioned officer, musician, and private, who has been recruited in the regular army of the United States, under the authority of the act of the eighth of April, thousand eight hundred and twelve, entitled “An act in addition to the the act, entitled ‘An act to raise an additional military force,’ passed January eleventh, one thousand eight hundred and twelve,” may be re-enlisted for the term of five years, or during the war; and that every non-commissioned officer, musician, and private, recruited under authority of the Act of April act of the twenty-ninth of January, one thousand eight hundred and thirteen, entitled “An act, in addition to the act, entitled ‘An act to raise an additional military force, and for other purposes,”’ may be re-enlisted for five years, or during the war.

Such recruits entitled to the bounty allowed by this act.Sec. 4. And be it further enacted, That the non-commissioned officers, musicians, and privates, re-enlisted under the authority of the preceding section, shall be entitled to the bounty allowed by this act to recruits for five years or for the war.

Approved, January 27, 1814.


Statute ⅠⅠ.


Jan. 27, 1814.
[Obsolete.]

Chap. VIII.An Act for the appointment of an additional judge for the Missouri territory, and for other purposes.

Additional judge for the Missouri territory to be appointed to reside at or near Arkansaw.Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That there shall be appointed an additional judge for the Missouri territory, who shall hold his office for the term of four years, unless sooner removed, shall reside at or near the village of Arkansaw, and who shall possess and exercise within the limits of the late district of Arkansaw, as fixed and established while the same was a part of the territory of Louisiana, or as the limits shall be established by the general assembly of the Missouri territory, the jurisdiction now possessed and exercised in said district, by the court of common pleas, as well as that possessed and exercised by the superior court within the said district, and to the exclusion of the original jurisdiction of the said court of common pleas and superior court within the same: Provided always,Writs of error to the court established by this act. That the said superior court, or any judge thereof in pursuance of the laws now in force in said territory, or of