Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 41 Part 2.djvu/308

 PROCLAMATIONS, 1919. 1747 Warning is hereby 'ven that no settlement initiated rior to seven “'°""”¤ °¤°i¤·*° days after the date in homestead entry herein resmiiibed will be iigriiagng pm to recogmzed, but all persons who go upon any of the lands to be restored hereunder and perform any act of settlement thereon prior to nme o’clock a. m., standard time, on `the ninety-first day from and after the date hereof, or who are on or are occupying any part of said lands at such hour, will be considered and dealt with as trespassers and will gam no rights whatever under such unlawful settlement or occupancy, except those having valid subsisting settlement rights initiated prior to withdrawal for settlement and since maintained, and J. n. mccame me those (persons, namely, J. H. McCallie and C. C. Osier, who have °‘°‘°“*°" reside upon and improved certain lands in Secs. 2 and 24, T. 13 N., R. 4 W., . M., within the area to be restored under this Proclamation since prior to September 28, 1917, under permit from the Forest Service of the Department of Agriculture, in case such occupation is _ maintained up to and including the date of restoration to homestead _ _ engly fixed hereby: Provided, however, that nothing herein contained ;°.`”El‘3}"‘”’°‘°“s “` sh prevent persons from going upon and over the lands to examine them with a view to appropriating them thereafter in accordance herewith. Persons having prior settlement rights, as above defined, ,,g*;',§"°{g"‘°m°¤* and the persons above named may, where the lands so claimed or ’ " occupied are surveyed, lpresent homestead ap lications for the lands conforming to legal su divisions not later tliian within the twenty day peigioél prior to the date of restoration to homestead entry herein rescribe. P IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereimto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done this sixteenth day of A ril, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundredp and nineteen, and of the Indepen— [SEAL.] dgjigée of the United States the one hundred and forty- t. Woonnow WILSON By the President: FRANK L. Pom: Acting Secretary of State. Br rm: Pnmsrnmrr or run Unrrnn Siwriss or Aunmca M·v¤·¤‘·*{¤; _ A PROCLAMATION. THE Boy Scouts of America have rendered notable service to the _ Boy S¤~¤¤¢s¤¢Amer- Nation during the world war. They have done effective work in the ‘°‘}+mmb1¤_ Liberty Loan and lVar Savings campaigns, in discovering and reporting upon the black walnut supply, in_cooperat1ng with the Red ross and other war work agencies, in acting as despatch bearers for the Committee on Public Information, and in other important fields. The Bo Scouts have not only demonstrated their worth tp the Nation, lmt have also materially contributed to a deeper appreciation by the American people of the higher conceptions o patriotism and good citizenship. The Boy Scout movement should not only be preserved, but strengthened. It deserves the support of all public-spirited citizens. The available means for the Boy Scout movement have thus far sufficecl for the organization and training of only a small proportion of the boys of the country. There are approximately 10,000,000 boys in the United States, between the ages of twelve and twenty-one. gin these only 375,000 are enrolled as members of the Boy Scouts of erica.