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easterly and northerly, as near as practicable, to the State Ranger School, to the hamlet of Cranberry Lake, thence northeasterly to Sevey Corners and easterly, southerly and easterly through the hamlet of Piercefield to the dividing line between Saint Lawrence and Franklin counties; thence southeasterly into the village of Tupper Lake; thence easterly to the road forks near Wawbeck Landing, thence northerly on the west side of Upper Saranac lake, thence easterly to connect with route thirty-one in the hamlet of Lake Clear Junction.

added to

§ 6. Such section one hundred and twenty is further amended Subd. 6a by adding a new subdivision after route number six to read as a 120. follows:

Route 6-a. Beginning at the east city line of the city of Geneva on North street, extending thence easterly along the north side of the Seneca river to the village of Waterloo, thence along west Main street in said village to Washington street connecting with county highway number one thousand two hundred and eleven. Upon the completion of the above described highway and its acceptance by the commissioner of highways, the state shall cease to maintain that portion of the Geneva-Waterloo state highway number five thousand and eighty-seven, from its intersection with highway eight thousand one hundred and eighty-three easterly to highway one thousand three hundred and ninety-nine in the village of Waterloo and such portion of highway five thousand and eighty-seven shall thereupon revert to the town of Fayette and to the village of Waterloo.

subds. 4

§ 7. Subdivisions four, five, eleven, fifteen, twenty-nine, forty- 122, nine and fifty-five of section one hundred and twenty-two10 of such 5, 11, 15. chapter, as last amended by chapter eighteen of the laws of nine- amended. teen hundred and twenty-one, shall read respectively as follows:

4. Cattaraugus county. Arcade-Farmersville, part two; LeonWesley, part one; Salamanca-Ellicottville, part two; CattaraugusDayton; Portville-Carroll; Randolph-Pope; Great Valley-Cadiz ; Clear Creek-Conewango Valley; North Franklinville-FarmersvilleWest Fairview; Salamanca-East Randolph; Portville-Obi, part one; Leon-Markham-Dayton; Sandusky-Fairview; Bradford-Carrollton, parts two and three; Allegany state park connection; Pennsylvania state line-Portville.11

5. Cayuga county. North Lansing-Genoa; Port Byron-Conquest; Victory-Red Creek; Aurora-Union Springs; Genoa-Locke; East Meridan-South Hannibal; Moravia-Cascade-Wyckoff; Mandana-New Hope; 12New Hope-Sempronius-Homer Gulf, part one; North Victory-Finch Corners.

11. Cortland county. Gee Brook-Pitcher; Harford-Marathon; 12New Hope-Sempronius-Homer Gulf, part two.

15. Essex county. Wallonsburg-Bouquet-Essex; Essex-Wills

10 Entire section 122 is amended by L. 1925, ch. 330, post.

11 Words"; Pennsylvania state line-Portville," new.

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12 Remainder of subd. 5 formerly read: -Scott, part one."
13 Remainder of subd. 11 formerly read: Mandana-New Hope-Scott, part

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two."

L. 1921,
ch. 50,
$430
amended.

boro; Hague-Ticonderoga, part two; Willsboro-Long Pond;14 Long

Pond-Keeseville.

29. Nassau county. Syosset-Cold Spring Harbor, part two; Westbury hamlet, Union avenue;15 New York city line to Suffolk county line through the southerly portion of Nassau county on a route to be determined by the commission.16

49. Suffolk county. East Moriches-West Hampton; West Hampton-Quogue; Southampton-Bridgehampton; Riverhead-Mattituck-Greenport; Huntington-Fort Salonga; Smithtown BranchCoram; Coram-Middle Island, east ;17 Syosset-Cold Spring Harbor, part three; Amityville village connection.

55. Washington county. Whitehall-Fair Haven; GreenwichCambridge;18 Thompson-Fort Edward; Greenwich village, Battenville connection; Hudson Falls village, connecting Glens Falls and Fort Ann roads; Adamsville-Granville; Kingsbury street-Smith's Basin; Middle Falls-South Argyle.19

§ 8. This act shall take effect immediately.

CHAPTER 123

AN ACT to amend the labor law, in relation to work performed under compressed air.

Became a law March 12, 1925, with the approval of the Governor. Passed, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. Section four hundred and thirty of title three of article fifteen of chapter fifty of the laws of nineteen hundred and twenty-one, entitled "An act in relation to labor, constituting chapter thirty-one of the consolidated laws," is hereby amended to read as follows:

§ 430. Shifts and intervals. The working time in any twentyfour hours shall be divided into two shifts under compressed air with an interval in open air. Persons who have not previously worked in compressed air shall work therein but one shift during the first twenty-four hours. No person shall be subjected to pressure exceeding fifty pounds except in emergency. The maximum number of hours, to each shift and minimum open air interval between the shifts during any twenty-four hours for any pressure, as given in columns one and two of the following table, shall be as set opposite such pressure in columns three, four, five and six:

14 Words "Lake Shore Road" omitted.
15 Words 66

two;" omitted.

Searington-Flower Hill, part two; Mineola-Searington, part

16 Words "6 ; county line road from pipe line to south country road,"

omitted.

17 Words

county line road from south country road to pipe line boulevard; " omitted.

18 Words "Greenwich-South Argyle; " omitted.
Middle Falls-South Argyle
;

19 Words "

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new.

SHIFTS AND INTERVALS OF WORK FOR EACH TWENTY-FOUR HOUR

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The employer may determine the time of each shift when the pressure is less than eighteen pounds,1 provided that the total for the two shifts does not exceed eight hours.

§ 2. This act shall take effect July first, nineteen hundred and in effect twenty-five.

July 1, 1925.

CHAPTER 124

AN ACT to release to Bertha Hayner, of the town of Brunswick, in the county of Rensselaer, all of the estate, right, title and interest of the people of the state of New York in and to certain real property of Irvin E. Littlefield, late of the said town of Brunswick, Rensselaer county, deceased, located in the said town of Brunswick.

Became a law March 13, 1925, with the approval of the Governor. Passed, three-fifths beings present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

certain de

land

Hayner.

Section 1. All of the estate, right, title and interest of the peo- Title of ple of the state of New York, in and to the lands hereinafter de- people ine scribed, formerly belonging to Irvin E. Littlefield, late of the town scribed of Brunswick, in the county of Rensselaer, deceased, are hereby released released to Bertha Hayner of the said town of Brunswick, in the Bertha county of Rensselaer, in the state of New York. The lands, in and to which such estate, right, title and interest are so released, are described as follows: All that tract or parcel of land situated in the town of Brunswick, county of Rensselaer, and state of New York, bounded and described as follows, namely: Beginning at a stake and stones standing in south line of the highway from Paul Smiths to Petersburgh, called the Old Road, near the house of Reuben Fowler, and in east line of John Date's farm, thence south forty-two degrees fifteen minutes east four chains thirty-two links, thence south fifty-four degrees thirty minutes east four chains 1 Formerly "twenty-one pounds."

To be removed

from

records

showing land to belong to state.

Certain

affected.

forty-six links to a rock oak sapling, thence south thirty-three degrees thirty minutes west four chains forty-seven links to a basswood sapling, thence south thirty-seven degrees twenty minutes east five chains eight links, thence south forty-two degrees fifteen minutes east three chains twenty-two links, thence south fortyseven degrees east one chain thirty-five links to a stake and stones, thence south forty degrees fifteen minutes west four chains twelve links to a stake and stones, thence south forty-three degrees fifty minutes east twenty-six chains fifty links to a stake and stones, thence south twenty-eight degrees west seventeen chains eighty links to a rock oak stake and stones, standing in the corner of Solomon Bulson's farm, thence south seventy-two degrees west six chains thirty-five links to a stake and stones, thence north fifty-four degrees west twenty-eight chains to a red oak stump, thence north fifty-seven degrees thirty minutes west six chains sixty links, thence north forty-nine degrees east eight chains twenty-three links, thence north twenty-two degrees thirty minutes east four chains ten links, thence north fifty-two degrees east eight chains fifty links to a stake and stones, thence north twenty-eight degrees west five chains ninety-five links, thence north forty degrees west seven chains sixty-five links, thence north forty degrees east ninety links to an oak stake, and thence north forty-four degrees east fourteen chains fifty-five links to the beginning. Also a piece of land now occupied by Gilbert Cammel as a private road leading from his house to aforesaid highway.

§ 2. The commissioners of the land office, the state comptroller, the secretary of state, and other state officers are hereby authorized and directed to remove said real property from the lists of unappropriated state lands," and other records in which said property appears as belonging to the state of New York.

66

§ 3. Nothing herein contained shall be construed to impair, rights not release or discharge any right, claim or interest of any heir at law, devisee or grantee, purchaser or creditor by judgment, mortgage or otherwise, in and to said premises or any part thereof, nor to warrant or insure by the state the title to the property so released or to any part thereof.

No war

ranty.

L. 1914,

ch. 369,

8 387

amended.

§ 4. This act shall take effect immediately.

CHAPTER 125

AN ACT to amend the banking law, in relation to restrictions on taking, holding and conveying real estate by savings and loan associations.

Became a law March 16, 1925, with the approval of the Governor. Passed, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. Section three hundred and eighty-seven of chapter three hundred and sixty-nine of the laws of nineteen hundred and fourteen, entitled "An act in relation to banking corporations, and individuals, partnerships, unincorps rated associations and corpora

tions under the supervision of the banking department, constituting chapter two of the consolidated laws," as amended by chapter one hundred and sixteen of the laws of nineteen hundred and twentyfour, is hereby amended to read as follows:

§ 387. Restrictions on taking, holding and conveying real estate. The cost of the plot and building or buildings for the transaction of the business of a savings and loan association shall in no case exceed twenty-five per centum of the guaranty fund of such association, except with the approval of the superintendent of banks; and before the purchase of such property is made or the erection of a building or buildings is commenced the estimate of the cost thereof and the plans of the building or buildings shall be submitted to the superintendent for such approval.

All real estate purchased by any such association or taken by it in settlement of debts due it, shall be conveyed to it directly by name and the conveyance immediately recorded in the office of the proper recording officer of the county in which such real estate is located.

Every parcel of real estate purchased or acquired by any such association shall be sold by it within five years of the date on which it shall have been acquired unless:

1. There shall be a building thereon occupied by it as an office; or 2. The superintendent of banks, on application of its board of directors, shall have extended the time within which such sale shall be made.

The superintendent may, in his discretion, by written order require any association under his supervision, whether organized under the provisions of this chapter or otherwise, to dispose of real estate which it has held for more than five years, within such time and in such manner as he shall prescribe in such order; provided that an order which prescribes the manner of sale shall not compel a sale within a period of less than one year from the date of the order.

No purchase or exchange of real estate shall be made by any such association unless authorized by a vote of two-thirds of its directors and, if such exchange involves the payment by the association of any difference in value, by the written approval of the superintendent of banks.

§ 2. This act shall take effect immediately.

CHAPTER 126

AN ACT to amend the executive law, in relation to the duties of the attor

ney-general.

Became a law March 16, 1925, with the approval of the Governor. Passed, three-fifths being present.

The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:

Section 1. Section sixty-seven of chapter twenty-three of the L. 1909, laws of nineteen hundred and nine, entitled "An act in relation Ch 23, 1 Following paragraph new.

$ 67

amended.

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