Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 43 Part 2.djvu/575

 PROCLAMATIONS, ma. 1915 NOW THEREFORE, I, WARREN G. HARDING, President U§{{‘,'f‘°““‘ M°““"‘°“*· of the Uinited States of America, by virtue of the ower in me vested W- 34. v· 225- by section two of the Act of Congress approved Jiine eight, nineteen hundred and six, entitled "An Act for the reservation of American antiquities", do proclaim that there are Eereb reserved from all forms of appropriation under the public land lyaws, subject to all prior valid adverse claims, and set apart as a National Monument to e known as Bryce Carggon Nationa Monument, all of the tracts of land in the State of Ut which are shown on the diagram forming a part hereof. The reservation made by this proclamation is not intended to pre- t,g{1;gFQ)§BS1;mg*;¤§cgj vent the use of the lands for National Forest purposes under the proc- eu. lamation establishing the Powell National Forest, and the two reser- ` vations shall both be effective on the land withdrawn, but the National Monument hereb established shall be the dominant reservation and any use of the lrand which interferes with its reservation or protection as a National Monument is hereby forbidden. VVarning is hereby given to all unauthorized persons not to appgio- m£1¤g¤_g:;°d**°mS°**** priate, injure, deface, remove or destroy any feature of this a- ` tional Monument or to locate or settle on any of the lands reserved by thi%proclamation. IN ITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. DONE at the City of Washington this eighth da of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and twenty- [SEAL.] three, and of the Independence of the United States of · America the one hundred and forty-seventh. WARREN G HARDING By the President: CHARLES E. HUGHES Secretary of State. Br THE PRESIDENT or THE UNITED STATES or Amnmca A PROCLAMATION. WHEREAS, The Secretar of Agriculture, b virtue of the author- P*°g•;°**°¤ 0* m*¤*¤· ity vested in him by sectionythree of the Migrgtory Bird Treaty Act miigmdfie. (40 Stat., 755), has submitted to me for approval, a regulation further V°l‘ *0* "‘ 755 amendatory of the regulations Iipproved and proclaimed July 31, 1918, V°1‘3°* p' lm which the Secretary of Agric ture has determined to be a suitable amendatory regulation permitting and gover the hunting, taking, capture, killing, possession, sale, purchase, shipment, trans- °dP·°¤“*°**°¤¤ °·¤¤°¤d· portation, carriage, and export of said birds and parts thereof and v¤1.m,&. 1s1a;v¤1. their nests and eggs, as follows: génfliéfppf  iii; REGULATION 4.—OPEN SEASONS ON AND POSSESSION OF °P°¤=¤¤°¤¤- CERTAIN MIGRATORY GAME BIRDS. Regulation 4, sub-title “Waterfowl (except wood duck, eider ducks, §X;*¤*f2W*· ¤*¤- and swans), coot, gallinules, and Wilson smpe or jacksnipe" is hereby amméeu. p` m' amended so as to read as follows: ’°°"* *’· *9**2- Waterfowl (excegt wood duck, eider ducks, and swans), coot, gallinules, and W` on snilpe or jacksnipe.——The open seasons for waterfowl (exceptwood duo, eider ducks, and swans), coot, gallinules, and Wilson sr§pe orlzljacksnipe, shall be as follows: In Maine, ew `ampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, New York m$ng°€'¤¤hi°**l “m**¤· (except Long Island), Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, '