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250 1923—Chapter 76-
Change of name
authorized.
Copy of resolu-tion
for change
filed.
Details to be
recited.
Laws amendtd.
January tentb, one thousand nine hundred and .seventeen, be and
are hereby authorized and fully empowered to hold amounts of
land in excess of the limitation provided in the local, private or
special act or resolution incorporating or chartering such cemetery
association or corporation.
Sec. 2. That all corporations or associations chartered or in-corporated
by any special act of the Legislature, as set forth in the
preceding section hereof, be and are hereby authorized and fully
empowered to change the name of such association or corporation
by a majority vote of its directors, and upon such change in name
it shall be the duty of the officers of the board of directors of such
corporation or association to file with the clerk of the Superior
Court a copy of resolution changing the name, which resolution
must show the act of the Legislature creating or incorporating the
same and the reasons for the change thereof.
Sec. 3. That all laws or clauses of laws in conflict herewith
be and the same are hereby repealed.
Sec. 4. Tliat this act shall be in force and effect from and after
its ratification.
Ratified this the 24th dav of Februarv. A. I). 1923.
CHAPTER 77
AN ACT PROVIDING FOR THE ACCEPTANCE OF THE BEN-NETT
PLACE IN DURHAM COUNTY, WITH A SUITABLE
MARKER ERECTED BY THE FAMILY OF SAMUEL T.
MORGAN. AND THE PERPETUAL CARE OF SAME.
Preamble. That whereas the agreement signed by General W. T. Sherman,
Major General of the United States Army, and General Joseph E.
Johnston, General of the Confederate States Army, Api-il eigh-teenth,
one thousand eight hundred and sixty-five, at the Bennett
place in Durham (then Orange) County, North Carolina, providing
for the disbanding of all Confederate armies then in existence and
the reestablishment of the State and Federal authority throughout
the Confederate States of America, and the subsequent signing
on April twenty-sixth, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-five,
by Major General W. T, Sherman and General Joseph E. Johnston,
at the said Bennett place, of a substituted agreement, the first
agreement having been repudiated by E. M. Stanton, Secretary of
War, for the disbanding of all troops under General Johnston's
command, under which order the demobilization of the Confederate
armies took place, constituted the final and last stand of the
Confederate States in the Civil War; and
Preamble. Whereas, in the perspective of time it is now becoming to be
universallv recognized that the maintenance of the principles of
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