I herewith return without approval House bill No. 1059, entitled 'An act to grant a pension to Joseph Romiser.'
the effort to attribute his death by apoplexy to the existence of hernia ought not to be successful.
There is no merit whatever in this case.
The results of these examinations should, I think, control as against the statements of neighbors and comrades.
The question is whether we are prepared to adopt this principle and establish this precedent.
he surely was not in the service nor in the performance of any military duty at the time of the injury
I am of the opinion that the evidence against the pension was quite satisfactory, and that it should not be restored, as...
I am satisfied that a fair examination of the facts in this case justifies the statement that the bill under considerati...
There does not appear to be any medical testimony to support the claim thus made by the widow.
The fact that the claim of the beneficiary has never been presented to the pension Bureau influences in some degree my a...
None of us are entitled to credit for extreme tenderness and consideration toward those who fought their country's battl...
His disability from army service should be conceded and his death at some time and in some manner may well be presumed; ...
It does not seem to me that the facts in this case, so far as they have been developed, justify the passage of this act.
It seems that this claim was not definitely passed upon.
This pension should not be allowed.
The beneficiary named is the widow of Rowley S. McKay.
I hereby return without approval Senate bill No. 365, entitled 'An act for the relief of Martin L. Bundy.'
This claimant was mustered out as paymaster on the last-mentioned date, and in 1872 a certificate was issued that, his a...